What: Dr Thomas Odeny: Text messaging to improve attendance at
post-operative clinic visits and reduce early resumption of sex after adult
male circumcision for HIV prevention.

When: Tuesday, May 21st at 12 noon

Where: The Allen Center, CSE 203

Over the last four years there has been significant discussion, both
domestically and internationally, about the WHO and UNAIDS recommendation
to circumcise men for HIV prevention. Several countries throughout
sub-Saharan Africa have been scaling up programs that provide voluntary
male circumcision, with Kenya leading in the greatest number of procedures
performed. While Kenya has been successful at facilitating the operations,
the greatest challenge has been in follow-up of men after surgery to
monitor wound healing, facilitating early detection and treatment of
adverse events, and to reinforce post-operative care instructions including
risk-reduction counseling and promotion of delayed resumption of sex.
Unfortunately, many men fail to return for scheduled post-operative visits.
The rapid increase in mobile phone connections in Kenya presents an
affordable, low-cost, and potentially effective avenue to improve
attendance at post-operative clinic visits and promote delayed resumption
of sex.

Dr Thomas Odeny is currently a Post-Graduate Fellow at the Institute for
Health Metrics and Evaluation in the Department of Global Health, where he
is learning new and innovative tools for research in the field of health
metrics. He is also a PhD student in the Department of Epidemiology advised
by Drs Scott McClelland, Elizabeth Bukusi, and King Holmes. Previously, he
was a Fogarty International Clinical Research Fellow in Kisumu, Kenya,
where he was PI for a study aimed at leveraging mobile technology to
address the global health challenge of HIV prevention and care among women
and children entitled, “Improving uptake of early infant diagnosis of HIV
for PMTCT: a randomized trial of a text messaging intervention.” He
received the Outstanding Student Award in Epidemiology (MPH) in 2012. For
his MPH thesis, he conducted a 1,200-person randomized trial on text
messaging to improve outcomes after adult male circumcision for HIV
prevention in Kenya. This study won him a nomination for the Top 11 in 2011
mHealth Innovators Challenge by the mHealth Alliance and Rockefeller
Foundation, and a Young Investigator Award at the 19th Conference on
Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. He remains committed to
long-term service in both HIV programs and research in Kenya. Having come
face-to-face with the magnitude of health disparities in Kenya, his passion
is to become a more capable global health researcher working to reduce new
HIV infections and finding more effective ways of providing and sustaining
care in sub-Saharan Africa.
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