N
Nzioki King'ola
Publications - 21
Citations - 1088
Nzioki King'ola is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Condom. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 21 publications receiving 977 citations.
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Heavy episodic drinking among Kenyan female sex workers is associated with unsafe sex, sexual violence and sexually transmitted infections.
TL;DR: Binge drinkers were more likely to report unprotected sex and sexual violence and to have either syphilis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Trichomonas vaginalis infection than non-binge drinkers, and HIV prevalence was higher among women having ever drunk than lifetime abstainers.
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Impact of five years of peer-mediated interventions on sexual behavior and sexually transmitted infections among female sex workers in Mombasa, Kenya
Stanley Luchters,Matthew Chersich,Agnes Rinyiru,Mary Stella Barasa,Nzioki King'ola,Kishorchandra Mandaliya,Wilkister Bosire,Sam Wambugu,Peter Mwarogo,Marleen Temmerman +9 more
TL;DR: Peer-mediated interventions were associated with an increase in protected sex and higher coverage is needed and more efficacious interventions to reduce overall vulnerability and risk.
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Factors associated with self-reported unprotected anal sex among male sex workers in Mombasa, Kenya.
TL;DR: Male sex workers who sell sex to men in Mombasa are in acute need of targeted prevention information on anal HIV and STI transmission, consistent condom use, and correct lubrication use with latex condoms.
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'Are you on the market?': a capture-recapture enumeration of men who sell sex to men in and around Mombasa, Kenya.
Scott Geibel,Elisabeth M. van der Elst,Nzioki King'ola,Stanley Luchters,Alun H. Davies,Esther M Getambu,Norbert Peshu,Susan M. Graham,R. Scott McClelland,Eduard J. Sanders,Eduard J. Sanders +10 more
TL;DR: The number of MSM who sell sex in and around Mombasa, Kenya, is estimated to be 739, a sizeable population who urgently need to be targeted by HIV prevention strategies.
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Effects of hazardous and harmful alcohol use on HIV incidence and sexual behaviour: a cohort study of Kenyan female sex workers
TL;DR: This prospective study, using validated alcohol measures, indicates that harmful or hazardous alcohol can influence sexual behaviour and Experimental evidence is required demonstrating that interventions to reduce alcohol use can avert unsafe sex.