| Literature DB >> 31061063 |
Xavier A Erguera1, Mallory O Johnson1, Torsten B Neilands1, Theodore Ruel1, Beth Berrean1, Sean Thomas1, Parya Saberi1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Youth and young adults bear a disproportionate share of the HIV burden and there is a critical need for interventions to curb health disparities experienced among these age groups. The purpose of our research is to build on our theory-guided model and formative research to develop a mobile health application, called WYZ, for improved engagement in HIV care and antiretroviral therapy adherence, and pilot test it among youth and young adults living with HIV (YLWH). In this paper, we explain the design and development of WYZ for YLWH, describe the design of a forthcoming pilot trial for evaluating the feasibility and acceptability of WYZ and compare WYZ with other mobile health applications being developed to improve engagement in HIV care and antiretroviral medication adherence. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We used an agile methodology, shown to be useful in software development, and elicited feedback during beta testing to develop WYZ. WYZ is a modular, adaptive and personalised intervention delivered via a mobile phone. It is grounded in the information, motivation, behaviouralskills model which has been valuable for understanding and guiding the development of interventions for complex health behaviours. WYZ was created in collaboration with YLWH aged 18-29 years using a human-centred design approach that emphasises understanding the perspective of the users of the technology. WYZ is intended to improve engagement in HIV care by: (1) enhancing medication adherence self-efficacy, (2) increasing awareness and use of community resources, (3) reducing barriers to communication between youth and their healthcare team, and (4) providing a secure platform for the formation of a private online community of YLWH. We will conduct a 6-month single-arm pilot study to examine feasibility and acceptability of WYZ among 76 YLWH who live or receive care in the San Francisco Bay Area. All study activities, including recruitment, screening, enrolment, study assessments, provision of incentives and exit interviews, will be conducted remotely. We will explore feasibility and acceptability outcomes of the intervention using quantitative and qualitative methods. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Study staff will obtain written consent for study participation from all participants. This study and its protocols have been approved by the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Institutional Review Board. Study staff will work with the UCSF Center for AIDS Prevention Studies' Community Engagement Core and the Youth Advisory Panel to disseminate results to the participants and the community using presentations, community forums, journal publications and/or social media. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03587857; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: world wide web technology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31061063 PMCID: PMC6501960 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Description of the WYZ features
| Module | Target barriers | Feature | Description |
| My Health | Busy, forgot, changes to routine, ran out of pills, unstructured lifestyles | My meds |
Name of medication, directions for use, refill date and pharmacy contact information Schedule medication alerts and refill reminders |
| My adherence | Track, monitor and visualise adherence | ||
| My labs | Track, monitor and visualise CD4+ cell count, and HIV viral load | ||
| My Team | Less mobility, travel/distance to clinic, depressions, substance use, mental health, inconsistent access to care | Appointments | Contact for front desk staff* |
| Health | Contact for primary care provider* | ||
| Housing and food | Contact for social worker*, listing of local agencies and organisations | ||
| Insurance | Contact for benefits counsellor* | ||
| Jobs and legal services | Listing of local agencies and organisations | ||
| Meds | Contact for pharmacists* | ||
| Mental health and substance use | Contact for counsellor/therapist*, listing of local agencies and organisations | ||
| Wellness and exercise | Listing of local agencies and organisations | ||
| My Community | Low health literacy, social isolation, stigma, lack of community support, medical mistrust | Chats | Anonymised and moderated discussion forum |
| News | Latest HIV and other relevant medical news | ||
| Calendar |
Community calendar: listing of free or low-cost events related to health, housing, food, employment, education, finance and wellness Personal calendar: scheduling appointments with healthcare team or other meetings not wished to be listed in native phone calendar |
*In cases where a user does not have access to this service at their clinic, they see a listing of local community organisations that offer these services for free or at low cost.
Feasibility metrics and threshold for determining feasibility
| Measure | Threshold (per user) |
| General | |
| Recruitment | Recruit at least 55 participants (ie, 70% of target n) |
| Number of log-ins | Mean of 1 log-in per week |
| Mean number of minutes in application | Mean of 15 min in application per week |
| My Health | |
| Use of refill feature | Use of feature once monthly (if receiving 30-day ART supply) |
| Use of ART adherence tracking | Track meds at least three times per week |
| Access of laboratory data | Review of laboratory data at least one time per month |
| My Team | |
| Communications with clinical team member | Mean of one communication per month with clinical team member |
| My Community | |
| Postchat or response to chats | Mean of one post or response to a post per week |
| Calendar and news | Minimum access once per week |
| Administrative | |
| Time for participant onboarding | Mean of 30 min to onboard (including downloading app and reviewing app features) |
| Time to maintain and support application | <1 hour per participant per week (excludes first visit) |
| Mean number of app crashes reported | Fewer than one self-reported app crash per week |
ART, antiretroviral therapy.
Comparison of mHealth applications for engagement in HIV care
| WYZ | AllyQuest | Battle Viro | EPIC Allies | PositiveLinks | Care4Today | SMART | |
| Phase of development | Pilot study | Pilot study | Formative study | Efficacy testing | Pilot study | Observational-descriptive | Proof of principle |
| Intervention type | Individual, dyadic and community level | Individual level with some peer-to-peer support | Individual level with some peer-to-peer support | Individual level with some social support | Individual and dyadic level | Individual level | Individual level |
| Framework | IMB model | Social cognitive theory, narrative communication and persuasive technology | IMB model | IMB model | Grounded in past evidence, no specific theory implicated | Technology acceptance model and theory of planned behaviour | Common sense model of self-regulation |
| Study design | Single-arm trial | Single-arm trial | Cross sectional | Randomised controlled trial | Single-arm trial | Prospective cohort | Randomised controlled trial |
| Methods | Survey; mobile analytics; chart review; interviews | Survey; mobile analytics; interviews | Survey; interviews | Survey; chart review; mobile analytics; interviews | Survey; mobile analytics; chart review | Focus groups | Survey; mobile analytics; chart review |
| Outcome measures | Feasibility; acceptability; usability | Feasibility; acceptability; usability | Feasibility; acceptability; usability | Efficacy; acceptability; perceived impact; sustainability | Acceptability; feasibility; visit attendance; viral suppression | Feasibility; acceptability; perceived utility | Adherence; viral load; |
| Sample size | n=76 YLWH | n=20 | n=20 | n=146 | n=77 | n=23 | n=28 |
| Follow-up | 6 months | 4 weeks | 45–60 min | 26 weeks | 12 months | 3 months | 3 months |
| Population of interest | YLWH | MSM | YLWH | MSM and TWSM | Adults living with HIV with high-acuity care needs | Adults living with HIV | Adults living with HIV |
| Study location | USA | USA | USA | USA | USA | USA | New Zealand |
| HIV care targets | Engagement in care and viral suppression | Viral suppression | Viral suppression | Engagement in care and viral suppression | Linkage to care, engagement in care and viral suppression | Viral suppression | Viral suppression |
| Intervention delivery | Mobile app | Mobile app | Prototype+compatible pill monitoring organiser | Mobile app | Mobile phone+cell service+mobile app | Mobile app | Mobile app |
| Platform accessibility | Android and iOS | iOS | iOS | Android and iOS | Android | Android and iOS | Android |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; HCP, healthcare provider; IMB, information, motivation, behavioural skills; MSM, men who have sex with men; TWSM, transgender women who have sex with men; YLWH, youth and young adults living with HIV.