| Literature DB >> 28472928 |
Marya Viorst Gwadz1, Linda M Collins2, Charles M Cleland3, Noelle R Leonard3, Leo Wilton4,5, Monica Gandhi6, R Scott Braithwaite7, David C Perlman8, Alexandra Kutnick3, Amanda S Ritchie3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than half of persons living with HIV (PLWH) in the United States are insufficiently engaged in HIV primary care and not taking antiretroviral therapy (ART), mainly African Americans/Blacks and Hispanics. In the proposed project, a potent and innovative research methodology, the multiphase optimization strategy (MOST), will be employed to develop a highly efficacious, efficient, scalable, and cost-effective intervention to increase engagement along the HIV care continuum. Whereas randomized controlled trials are valuable for evaluating the efficacy of multi-component interventions as a package, they are not designed to evaluate which specific components contribute to efficacy. MOST, a pioneering, engineering-inspired framework, addresses this problem through highly efficient randomized experimentation to assess the performance of individual intervention components and their interactions. We propose to use MOST to engineer an intervention to increase engagement along the HIV care continuum for African American/Black and Hispanic PLWH not well engaged in care and not taking ART. Further, the intervention will be optimized for cost-effectiveness. A similar set of multi-level factors impede both HIV care and ART initiation for African American/Black and Hispanic PLWH, primary among them individual- (e.g., substance use, distrust, fear), social- (e.g., stigma), and structural-level barriers (e.g., difficulties accessing ancillary services). Guided by a multi-level social cognitive theory, and using the motivational interviewing approach, the study will evaluate five distinct culturally based intervention components (i.e., counseling sessions, pre-adherence preparation, support groups, peer mentorship, and patient navigation), each designed to address a specific barrier to HIV care and ART initiation. These components are well-grounded in the empirical literature and were found acceptable, feasible, and promising with respect to efficacy in a preliminary study. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: African American; Antiretroviral initiation; Black; Disparities; HIV care; HIV care continuum; Hispanic; Intervention; MOST; Multiphase optimization strategy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28472928 PMCID: PMC5418718 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4279-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Conceptual model grounded in the theory of triadic influence and self determination theory
Fig. 2Conditions in the fractional factorial design
Fig. 3Sequence of HTH2-MOST study activities
Assessment instruments
| PROXIMAL MEDIATORS (to assess each intervention component) | |
|---|---|
|
| Outcome expectancies re: care and ART (9 items each; α = .93) [ |
| Care and ART Necessity scale (10 items each; α = .80) [ | |
| HIV and ART distrust (10 items; α = .84); HIV health care provider distrust (11 items; α = .88); General medical distrust (7 items; α = .72) [ | |
| Care & ART Concerns & Fears subscale (disclosure, side effects; 13 items; α = .80) [ | |
|
| Mean % adherence rating from up to 4 one-week trial periods via MEMS caps; HIV Medication Readiness Scale (10 items; α = .90) [ |
|
| Peer models (number and quality of “successful” HIV+ peers in care, on ART; α = .90) [ |
| Subjective peer norms for HIV care and ART (6 items each; α = .84) [ | |
|
| Social support (α = .88) [ |
| Stigma associated with taking or not taking HIV care and ART (3 items each; α = .73) [ | |
|
| HIV-related structural/ practical barriers to care, ART (α = .72) [ |
| DISTAL MEDIATORS | Motivation and readiness for care and ART [ |
| Schedule of HIV appointments [ | |
| ART Prescription [ | |
| Ancillary treatment [ | |
| Substance use frequency [ | |
| Depression [ | |
| MODERATORS | Socio-demographic characteristics (age, biological sex, sexual minority status, race/ethnicity) |
| HIV history and ART history | |
| Substance use [ | |
| Depression [ | |
| Anxiety | |
| OTHER DESCRIPTIVE AND BACKGROUND VARIABLES | Housing status, transgender gender identity, employment status, health status; where receives HIV care, incarceration; sex work history; reasons not on ART or discontinued ART; ART side effects (at FU); HIV treatment knowledge [ |