Angela Kelly‐Hanku
Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research(PG)
Publications by Year
Research Areas
HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions, Global Maternal and Child Health, Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health, Sex work and related issues, HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
Most-Cited Works
- → Self-collection for HPV-based cervical screening: a qualitative evidence meta-synthesis(2021)94 cited
- → Field Evaluation of Xpert HPV Point-of-Care Test for Detection of Human Papillomavirus Infection by Use of Self-Collected Vaginal and Clinician-Collected Cervical Specimens(2016)78 cited
- → Reduction in natural death and renal failure from a systematic screening and treatment program in an Australian Aboriginal community(2003)73 cited
- → I shouldn’t talk of medicine only: Biomedical and religious frameworks for understanding antiretroviral therapies, their invention and their effects(2017)70 cited
- → Reducing premature death and renal failure in Australian Aboriginals(2000)70 cited
- → Living loss: an exploration of the internal space of liminality(2008)54 cited
- → Point-of-care HPV DNA testing of self-collected specimens and same-day thermal ablation for the early detection and treatment of cervical pre-cancer in women in Papua New Guinea: a prospective, single-arm intervention trial (HPV-STAT)(2022)50 cited
- → ‘We call it a virus but I want to say it's the devil inside’: Redemption, moral reform and relationships with God among people living with HIV in Papua New Guinea(2014)47 cited
- → Performance of clinical screening algorithms comprising point-of-care HPV-DNA testing using self-collected vaginal specimens, and visual inspection of the cervix with acetic acid, for the detection of underlying high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions in Papua New Guinea(2018)46 cited
- → Performance of syndromic management for the detection and treatment of genital Chlamydia trachomatis , Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Trichomonas vaginalis among women attending antenatal, well woman and sexual health clinics in Papua New Guinea: a cross-sectional study(2017)44 cited