| Literature DB >> 24877036 |
Patrick S Sullivan1, Rob Stephenson2, Beau Grazter3, Gina Wingood4, Ralph Diclemente4, Susan Allen5, Colleen Hoff6, Laura Salazar7, Lamont Scales8, Jeanne Montgomery9, Ann Schwartz10, Jasper Barnes1, Kristina Grabbe8.
Abstract
To respond to the need for new HIV prevention services for men who have sex with men (MSM) in the United States, and to respond to new data on the key role of main partnerships in US MSM epidemics, we sought to develop a new service for joint HIV testing of male couples. We used the ADAPT-ITT framework to guide our work. From May 2009 to July 2013, a multiphase process was undertaken to identify an appropriate service as the basis for adaptation, collect data to inform the adaptation, adapt the testing service, develop training materials, test the adapted service, and scale up and evaluate the initial version of the service. We chose to base our adaptation on an African couples HIV testing service that was developed in the 1980s and has been widely disseminated in low- and middle-income countries. Our adaptation was informed by qualitative data collections from MSM and HIV counselors, multiple online surveys of MSM, information gathering from key stakeholders, and theater testing of the adapted service with MSM and HIV counselors. Results of initial testing indicate that the adapted service is highly acceptable to MSM and to HIV counselors, that there are no evident harms (e.g., intimate partner violence, relationship dissolution) associated with the service, and that the service identifies a substantial number of HIV serodiscordant male couples. The story of the development and scale-up of the adapted service illustrates how multiple public and foundation funding sources can collaborate to bring a prevention adaptation from concept to public health application, touching on research, program evaluation, implementation science, and public health program delivery. The result of this process is an adapted couples HIV testing approach, with training materials and handoff from academic partners to public health for assessment of effectiveness and consideration of the potential benefits of implementation; further work is needed to optimally adapt the African couples testing service for use with male-female couples in the United States.Entities:
Keywords: ADAPT-ITT; AIDS; Adaptation; Counseling; Couples; HIV; MSM; Prevention; Testing
Year: 2014 PMID: 24877036 PMCID: PMC4035496 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Summary of results of theater testing of an adapted couples HIV testing service, by focus group participant type, Atlanta, Chicago and Seattle, October 2010
| Unit of analysis | Black MSM | White MSM | HIV counselors | HIV testing clinic managers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
|
| 18 | 19 | 17 | 14 |
|
| No | No | No | No |
|
| No: MSM want to be able to come in when they’re pre-sexual, too. | No: MSM want to be able to come in when they’re pre-sexual, too. | No: No time limit should be placed on couple history so that new couples can feel protected, too. | No: They said this reinforces stigma and increases risky behavior |
|
| Entry-forms and consent forms should be completed separately | Entry-forms and consent forms should be completed separately | Entry-forms and consent forms should be completed separately | Entry-forms and consent forms should be completed separately |
|
| Opt-out clause should only be given once | Ground rules need to be made clear | Opt-out and ground rules good | Opt-out and ground rules good |
| Ground rules are good | Should remind couple that they will hear each other’s results right before delivering them | Need to remind couples of confidentiality throughout session | Need to remind couples of confidentiality throughout session | |
|
| Role-play is good | History of service is not relevant | Role-play is good and feel able to facilitate | Role-play is good and feel able to facilitate |
| Role-play is good | ||||
|
| Should be delivered verbally | Should be delivered verbally | Should be delivered verbally | Should be delivered verbally |
| Positive should always be delivered first if sero-discordant | Positive should always be delivered first if sero-discordant | Positive should always be delivered first if sero-discordant | Positive should always be delivered first if sero-discordant | |
| Should tell people “results are the same” before delivering results | Should tell people “results are the same” before delivering results | Should tell people “results are the same” before delivering results | Should tell people “results are the same” before delivering results | |
|
| CVCT is needed | The service is essential | CVCT is needed | CVCT is needed |
| Only male counselors should be used | Need facilities where couple can have privacy | Men’s clinic or after-hours clinic would be best | Male counselors should be used | |
| History of service is not relevant | History of service is not relevant |
Figure 1Example of a training palm card with the CHTC protocol steps. Materials such as these are used in training and support of counselors being trained to deliver the CHTC service.
Figure 2Timeline for activities related to the adaptation and testing of a couples HIV testing service for by type of funding, United States, 2009–2015. Emory CFAR: Emory Centers for AIDS Research; NIH/NIMH: National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Mental Health CDC: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; ECHPP: Enhanced Comprehensive HIV Prevention Planning Project; RCT: Randomized Clinical Trial.