| Literature DB >> 29712625 |
Rob Stephenson1, Erin E Bonar2, Adam Carrico3, Alexis Hunter1, Daniel Connochie4, Rebecca Himmelstein1, Jose Bauermeister4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Young men who have sex with men (YMSM) and transgender people in the Detroit Metro Area are the only risk group for whom the incidence of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STI) has increased since 2000, with HIV incidence nearly doubling among youth. Substance use (including alcohol), which is relatively frequent among YMSM and transgender people, creates barriers to the optimal delivery of HIV prevention and care services. Standard HIV counseling, testing, and referral (CTR) is limited in providing strategies to identify and address substance use. Hence, in its current form, CTR may not be serving the prevention needs of substance-using YMSM and transgender people. Brief counseling interventions, grounded in principles of motivational interviewing, may offer a mechanism to meet the HIV prevention and care needs of substance-using YMSM and transgender people.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; drug abuse; men who have sex with men; motivational interviewing; substance use disorders
Year: 2018 PMID: 29712625 PMCID: PMC5952122 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.9414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Steps taken during Component 1 of the Swerve intervention compared with standard counseling, testing, and referral (CTR) steps.
| Steps | Swerve intervention (SUBIa) Component 1: Alcohol, drugs, and sex | CTR: HIV prevention counseling |
| 1 | Rapport-building, exploring participants’ strengths and near-term goals | Introduce and orient the participant/client to the session and conduct of HIV test |
| 2 | Review of alcohol and substance use and conduct of HIV test | Identify risk behaviors and circumstances |
| 3 | Psychoeducation about alcohol/drugs and HIV risk | Identify safer goal behavior |
| 4 | Explore benefits to reducing substance use/harm reduction | Identify action steps |
| 5 | Build commitment to change | Provide referrals and support |
| 6 | Summary of Steps 1-6 | Summarize and close |
| 7 | Explore possible reactions to HIV test results | — |
aSUBI: substance use brief intervention.
Steps taken during Component 2 of the Swerve intervention.
| Steps | Swerve intervention (SUBIa) | CTRc: HIV test counseling and partner services (nonreactive results) | Swerve intervention (SUBI) | CTR: HIV test counseling and partner services (reactive results) |
| 8 | Response to testing nonreactive result | Meaning of test results | Response to testing HIV positive | Meaning of test results |
| 9 | Focus on repeat HIV testing | Cost and benefit analysis of testing | Focus on linkage to HIV care | Cost and benefit analysis of testing |
| 10 | PrEP referral | Interpretation of HIV test results | Links to Component 1 (goals, strengths, and substance use as a barrier) | Interpretation of HIV test results |
| 11 | Links to Component 1 (goals, strengths, and substance use as a barrier) | Reinforce plan for reducing risk based on test results | Summary and plan for action | Renegotiate risk reduction plan |
| 12 | Summary and plan for action | — | — | Discuss disclosure, partner services, appropriate referrals for medical evaluations, and early intervention services |
| 13 | — | — | — | Collect specimen for confirmatory testingd |
aSUBI: substance use brief intervention.
bPrEP: pre-exposure prophylaxis.
cCTR: counseling, testing, and referral.
dEach ASO has specific procedure for confirmatory testing. Detroit-Blood draw for confirmatory testing: results in 3 days. Ypsilanti-Rapid test for confirmatory testing: results in 1 min. Flint-Rapid test for confirmatory testing: results in 20 min.