| Literature DB >> 32527276 |
Elizabeth C Pasipanodya1, Maulika Kohli2,3, Celia B Fisher4, David J Moore5, Brenda Curtis6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Methamphetamine use poses a barrier to antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence. Black and Hispanic men who have sex with men living with HIV (PLWH) shoulder much of the health burden resulting from the methamphetamine and HIV syndemic. Smartphones are nearly ubiquitous in the USA and may be promising vehicles for delivering interventions for ART adherence and drug use cessation. However, the acceptability of using applications to collect sensitive information and deliver feedback in this population has not been adequately explored.Entities:
Keywords: ART adherence; Bioethics; HIV; Methamphetamine; Participatory design; mHealth
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32527276 PMCID: PMC7288402 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-020-00384-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Socio-demographic and substance use characteristics of study participants
| Characteristic | Total sample ( |
|---|---|
| Age, median [IQR] | 46 [38, 52.5] |
| Race and ethnicity, | |
| Black | 5 (39) |
| White | 5 (39) |
| Mixed | 3 (23) |
| Hispanic | 7 (54) |
| Employed, | 2 (15) |
| Income < $10,000, | 7 (54) |
| Unstably housed, | 5 (42) |
| Years living with HIV infection, median [IQR] | 14.3 [9.3, 18.5] |
| Years on ART, median [IQR] | 10 [5, 19] |
| Poor ART adherence (CASE ≤ 10), | 9 (69) |
| Stage of readiness to change (MA use cessation), | |
| Precontemplation | 1 (7) |
| Contemplation | 7 (54) |
| Action | 5 (39) |
| Possible MA use disorder (DAST≥ 6), | 6 (46) |
IQR interquartile range, ART antiretroviral therapy, MA methamphetamine, CASE Center for Adherence Support Evaluation, DAST Drug Abuse Screening Test
Themes and exemplar quotes related to concerns and barriers of using of the hypothetical app as well as suggestions to mitigate concerns and encourage participation
| App feature | Concerns and barriers | Suggestions to mitigate concerns |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Adherence messages | • “Just don’t say HIV. A lot of people aren’t comfortable with that… A lot of people, and I can only just speak for myself, but a lot of my associates don’t know. I’m pretty sure I would lose friends if they knew.” • “I don’t know if—excuse me. I don’t know if an app would even help me because you send me a text sayin’, ‘Take your meds,’ if I’m doin’ meth and haven’t taken it, it’s like, ‘Oh, well.’ I still won’t take it because you have to take your meds with the food.” | • “… personalize it to different people. Some people are more private about their HIV status or AIDS status than others are.” • “…you wanna keep it confidential, they won’t know that it’s about or meds or anything. You see what I’m sayin”? “Something like, ‘You have a doctor’s appointment today.’ Then you confirm.” • “Staying healthy and having that kind of self-esteem and things that go deeper than medication. That sort of thing… personal habits.” |
| 2. Mood messages | • “I don’t know… Some reason, I just don’t want anybody to know that I’m goin’ through depression.” • “Answering all those questions made me more aware of my feelings, and I didn’t necessarily like it…” | • “Mood wise, I would just keep it light, simple. Like… sunny or somethin’.” • “Probably something nauseating cute…like a little piglet wiggling its butt or something like that, just to cheer you up on the way.” “Create like an app where you can motivate at the same time… ‘you’re special, you’re a winner.’” |
| 3. MA messages | • “Yeah. I’m gonna have to know what were you guys gonna do with that information because I’m home this weekend. If I got a question like that, and I was using at that time, there’s no way I’d wanna answer you that I’m using… Yeah. I just verified it, so come get me.” • “I’m more inclined to think that askin’ that question may cause some people who might be tryin’ to stop to relapse.” • “It’s something personal, but still, it’s your decision to stop or not. We know that it’s not good to use that drug. We already know. We might have many motives to use it.” | • “To satisfy his paranoia, that you guys say in the contract or whatever that you’re not gonna call the police because you’re using meth, or any drugs.” • “Have two faces. A good or a bad. Then just have those faces determine whether—meaning, did you use, or did you not use? … What color are you today? Then just pick—if you use that day, you just pick a certain color. It doesn’t have anything to do with anything connected to the law enforcement or whatever.” • “…days clean. Have a check mark where you can mark how many days you been clean. Thirteen, fourteen. Have you missed—if you’re not clean, just X or somethin’… use a more positive term.” • “It would be a good tool, at least to avoid those skipping medications that I have when I use drugs, if I decide to keep on using drugs… it reminds you right away that you have to take care of yourself, even you didn’t take care of yourself because you were using the drug, right?” |
| 4. Location assessment | • “We won’t have to be going to jail because of what we were honest about, or connected to, in the research study… Well, as a result, boom, you’re charged possession and whatever… People worry about these things.” • “It’s like having a camera in every corner in every alley.” | • “Maybe you could change it, word it as such, ‘Steppin’ out? Don’t forget to pack fun pack or whatever.’ That way, if they’re leavin’ and goin’ somewhere, I need to make sure I take this with me.” |
| 5. Overall study features | • “When I’m using, I don’t answer my phone, period. The ringer’s down. I don’t wanna hear it ring. I don’t wanna hear it buzz… that brings my high down, then I have to get high again, just to get where I was before.” • “…when you pushin’, then I be like, ‘Who you?’ … When it’s comin’ to me like that, I’m like, ‘Forget you.’ That put me, more or less, in a bad mood, and I won’t even bother to answer the question.” • “It’s a no-brainer. Drugs get in the way. They do. That’s period.” • “I don’t think the app—not everybody pays their cell phone bill on time, so they get cut off or, especially if they’re reliant on an Obama phone, they’re limited to two gigabytes of data, which gets used up quickly with a movie. Then they can’t go online to do that.” • “I’ve got a Smartphone and an Obama phone, and my friend who’s down and out, to get him back on his feet, I loaned him my Obama phone, and he sold it for food… The phones are traded commodities out there… Yeah…In fact, it passed through five hands before I found out who had it.” | • “What if they had a question that you could check the box, where you could answer later…?” • “Catering the survey for your needs would be something like the day after, or it’s three days later, and then they do a retrospective survey.” • “What if you could enable something like that or disable it, so you can use it sometimes, but if you’re like, ‘Okay, I find this too much,’ so you can turn on or off?” • “You want the app to appeal to people and not turn them away. You gonna wanna have a lotta customization in it… it’s designed this way so they would look forward to goin’ into the app, maybe participating in things that they like. You might have several different things they could participate in on there… It’s like, ‘Let me see what they have to say today?’ I’m gonna look at it whether I take it [ART] or not.” • “… you can — not to bring up the other doctors, but Dr. [HNRC researcher’s name], you can do his study for nine months, eight months, and you get an iPhone… They tell you to use it for, the study…That might be helpful to someone.” • “I like the idea of an app with a sign-in because phones get lost all the time. Usually, they’re stolen by your friends who know your access code to get in the phone.” “…you know the information is encrypted or double encrypted and all that kind of stuff… give one—the security, the sense of security to answer a personal question.” • “Ask permission. Do we have permission to check on your sobriety, yes or no? Maybe pose the question again. Could we ask you in 30 days? How about 90 days? Somethin’ like that. Permissions for everything that you might wanna do on that app, but not too many because then it becomes intrusive.” |