| Literature DB >> 30714388 |
Amy Pennar1, Sylvie Naar1, Steven Woods2,3, Sharon Nichols4, Angulique Outlaw5, Deborah Ellis5.
Abstract
Using a phased model of intervention development, we developed an intervention to promote resilience in youth living with HIV via improved neurocognitive resources. First, youth completed a naturalistic prospective memory (PM) task and were randomized into a visualization condition or control condition. Next, 47 of these participants completed another naturalistic PM task and were randomized into Calendaring condition, an Alarm condition, a Combined condition, or a Control condition. Youth with low PM demonstrated observable gains from the visualization technique. Youth in the Combined Calendaring and Alarm condition demonstrated significantly better performance than participants in the Control and Calendaring conditions. In a Proof-of-Concept study with 16 youth, the previous findings were translated into a single session in-person intervention followed by tailored text messaging to improve adherence and viral load via improved neurocognitive resources. The resulting intervention showed a signal of effect with viral load reductions in youth with available data. Targeting compensatory strategies to enhance neurocognitive functioning may promote resilience and health outcomes. A randomized pilot study with a control condition is the next step.Entities:
Keywords: Neuropsychological; adolescent; medication adherence; memory; self-management; text messaging; viral load
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30714388 DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2019.1576851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Care ISSN: 0954-0121