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Maryam Shahmanesh

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  168
Citations -  3344

Maryam Shahmanesh is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 141 publications receiving 2282 citations. Previous affiliations of Maryam Shahmanesh include UCL Institute for Global Health & University of Birmingham.

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Effectiveness of interventions for the prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections in female sex workers in resource poor setting: a systematic review

TL;DR: The evidence for effectiveness of HIV and sexually transmitted infection prevention interventions in female sex workers in resource poor settings is reviewed to systematically review the evidence.
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Chemsex behaviours among men who have sex with men: A systematic review of the literature.

TL;DR: A minority of MSM appear to engage in chemsex behaviours but they are at risk of this negatively impacting on their health and well-being and if chemsex influences uptake of PrEP, PEP and sexual health screening.
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Nosocomial Transmission of Coronavirus Disease 2019: A Retrospective Study of 66 Hospital-acquired Cases in a London Teaching Hospital.

TL;DR: In a major London teaching hospital, inpatient cases between 2 March and 12 April 2020 were definitely or probably hospital-acquired, through varied transmission routes, and Nosocomial infection rates fell following comprehensive infection prevention and control measures.
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Sexualized drug use ('chemsex') and high-risk sexual behaviours in HIV-positive men who have sex with men.

TL;DR: It is aimed to characterize HIV‐positive MSM engaging in chemsex/slamsex and to assess the associations with self‐reported STI diagnoses and sexual behaviours.
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Community mobilization, empowerment and HIV prevention among female sex workers in south India

TL;DR: The hypothesis that community mobilization has benefits for empowering FSWs both individually and collectively is supported, and the impact of combined community-level interventions on measures of empowerment as a means to HIV prevention is measured.