C
Carol S. Camlin
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 98
Citations - 2539
Carol S. Camlin is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1906 citations. Previous affiliations of Carol S. Camlin include University of California, Berkeley & Research Triangle Park.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Substance use and risky sexual behavior among homeless and runaway youth.
TL;DR: Results suggest that prevention and targeted intervention efforts have had some positive effect on this population, but young homeless women are in need of targeted prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI
HIV Testing and Treatment with the Use of a Community Health Approach in Rural Africa
Diane V. Havlir,Laura B. Balzer,Edwin D. Charlebois,Tamara D. Clark,Dalsone Kwarisiima,James Ayieko,Jane Kabami,Norton Sang,Teri Liegler,Gabriel Chamie,Carol S. Camlin,Vivek Jain,Kevin Kadede,Mucunguzi Atukunda,Theodore Ruel,Starley B. Shade,Emmanuel Ssemmondo,Dathan M. Byonanebye,Florence Mwangwa,Asiphas Owaraganise,Winter Olilo,Douglas Black,Katherine Snyman,Rachel Burger,Monica Getahun,Jackson Achando,Benard Awuonda,Hellen Nakato,Joel Kironde,Samuel Okiror,Harsha Thirumurthy,Catherine A. Koss,Lillian B. Brown,Carina Marquez,Joshua Schwab,Geoff Lavoy,Albert Plenty,Erick Wafula,Patrick Omanya,Yea-Hung Chen,James F. Rooney,Melanie Bacon,Mark J. van der Laan,Craig R. Cohen,Elizabeth A. Bukusi,Moses R. Kamya,Maya L. Petersen +46 more
TL;DR: Universal HIV treatment did not result in a significantly lower incidence of HIV infection than standard care, probably owing to the availability of comprehensive baseline HIV testing and the rapid expansion of ART eligibility in the control group.
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Texting improves testing: a randomized trial of two-way SMS to increase postpartum prevention of mother-to-child transmission retention and infant HIV testing.
Thomas A. Odeny,Elizabeth A. Bukusi,Craig R. Cohen,Krista Yuhas,Carol S. Camlin,R. Scott McClelland +5 more
TL;DR: Text messaging significantly improved maternal postpartum visit attendance, but overall return rates for these visits remained low, and high rates of early infant HIV testing were achieved in both arms, with significantly higher testing rates in the SMS compared to the control infants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Men “missing” from population-based HIV testing: insights from qualitative research
Carol S. Camlin,Emmanuel Ssemmondo,Gabriel Chamie,Alison M. El Ayadi,Dalsone Kwarisiima,Norton Sang,Jane Kabami,Edwin D. Charlebois,Maya L. Petersen,Tamara D. Clark,Elizabeth A. Bukusi,Craig R. Cohen,Moses R. Kamya,Diane V. Havlir +13 more
TL;DR: Structural and cultural barriers, including men’s mobility and gender norms valorizing risk-taking and discouraging health-seeking behavior, were observed, and contributed to men”s lower participation in HIV testing relative to women.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gender, migration and HIV in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Carol S. Camlin,Victoria Hosegood,Victoria Hosegood,Marie-Louise Newell,Marie-Louise Newell,Nuala McGrath,Nuala McGrath,Till Bärnighausen,Till Bärnighausen,Rachel C. Snow +9 more
TL;DR: Higher risk sexual behavior in the context of migration increased women's likelihood of HIV infection.