Published on in Vol 5, No 1 (2019): Jan-Mar

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/11285, first published .
Kuantim mi tu (“Count me too”): Using Multiple Methods to Estimate the Number of Female Sex Workers, Men Who Have Sex With Men, and Transgender Women in Papua New Guinea in 2016 and 2017

Kuantim mi tu (“Count me too”): Using Multiple Methods to Estimate the Number of Female Sex Workers, Men Who Have Sex With Men, and Transgender Women in Papua New Guinea in 2016 and 2017

Kuantim mi tu (“Count me too”): Using Multiple Methods to Estimate the Number of Female Sex Workers, Men Who Have Sex With Men, and Transgender Women in Papua New Guinea in 2016 and 2017

Journals

  1. Kelly-Hanku A, Redman-MacLaren M, Boli-Neo R, Nosi S, Ase S, Aeno H, Nembari J, Amos A, Gabuzzi J, Kupul M, Williie B, Narokobi R, Hou P, Pekon S, Kaldor J, Badman S, Vallely A, Hakim A, Peters R. Confidential, accessible point-of-care sexual health services to support the participation of key populations in biobehavioural surveys: Lessons for Papua New Guinea and other settings where reach of key populations is limited. PLOS ONE 2020;15(5):e0233026 View
  2. Neal J, Prybylski D, Sanchez T, Hladik W. Population Size Estimation Methods: Searching for the Holy Grail. JMIR Public Health and Surveillance 2020;6(4):e25076 View
  3. Willie B, Hakim A, Badman S, Weikum D, Narokobi R, Coy K, Gabuzzi J, Pekon S, Gene S, Amos A, Kupul M, Hou P, Dala N, Whiley D, Wapling J, Kaldor J, Vallely A, Kelly-Hanku A. High prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis among female sex workers, men who have sex with men, and transgender women in Papua New Guinea. Tropical Medicine and Health 2021;49(1) View
  4. Machekera S, Boas P, Temu P, Mosende Z, Lote N, Kelly-Hanku A, Mahiane S, Glaubius R, Rowley J, Gurung A, Korenromp E. Strategic options for syphilis control in Papua New Guinea– impact and cost-effectiveness projections using the syphilis interventions towards elimination (SITE) model. Infectious Disease Modelling 2021;6:584 View
  5. Neuendorf N, Cheer K, Tommbe R, Kokinai C, Simeon L, Browne K, MacLaren D, Redman-MacLaren M. Sexual health and wellbeing training with women in Pacific Island Countries and Territories: a scoping review. Global Health Action 2021;14(1) View
  6. Guure C, Dery S, Afagbedzi S, Tun W, Weir S, Quaye S, Ankomah A, Torpey K, Nguefack-Tsague G. National and subnational size estimation of female sex workers in Ghana 2020: Comparing 3-source capture-recapture with other approaches. PLOS ONE 2021;16(9):e0256949 View
  7. Roussos S, Paraskevis D, Malliori M, Hatzakis A, Sypsa V. Estimating the number of people who inject drugs using repeated respondent-driven sampling (RDS) in a community-based program: implications for the burden of hepatitis C and HIV infections and harm reduction coverage. AIDS and Behavior 2023;27(2):424 View
  8. Weikum D, Kelly-Hanku A, Neo-Boli R, Aeno H, Badman S, Vallely L, Willie B, Kupul M, Hou P, Amos A, Narokobi R, Pekon S, Coy K, Wapling J, Gare J, Kaldor J, Vallely A, Hakim A. Sexual and reproductive health needs and practices of female sex workers in Papua New Guinea: findings from a biobehavioral survey Kauntim mi tu (‘Count me too’). Archives of Public Health 2022;80(1) View
  9. Avery L, Rotondi M. Evaluation of Respondent-Driven Sampling Prevalence Estimators Using Real-World Reported Network Degree. Sociological Methodology 2023;53(2):269 View
  10. Gamble L, Johnston L, Pham P, Vinck P, McLaughlin K. Estimating the Size of Clustered Hidden Populations. Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology 2023;11(5):1155 View