| Literature DB >> 32607502 |
Jessica F Magidson1, John A Joska2, Bronwyn Myers3,4, Jennifer M Belus1, Kristen S Regenauer1, Lena S Andersen2, Sybil Majokweni2, Conall O'Cleirigh5, Steven A Safren6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Substance use is prevalent in South Africa and associated with poor HIV treatment outcomes, yet, it is largely unaddressed in HIV care. Implementing an evidence-based, task-shared intervention for antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and substance use integrated into HIV care may be a feasible and effective way to improve HIV treatment outcomes and reduce substance use in this population.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence; Global mental health; HIV; Hybrid design; RE-AIM; Substance use
Year: 2020 PMID: 32607502 PMCID: PMC7326344 DOI: 10.1186/s43058-020-00004-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci Commun ISSN: 2662-2211
RE-AIM framework applied to study outcomes
| Dimension | Description | Outcome assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | Intervention ability to reach participants who have both SU problems and ART nonadherence | • % of patients screened who meet eligibility criteria for study enrollment |
| Effectiveness | ART adherence (primary) | • Number of doses missed divided by the number of prescribed doses (measured via Wisepill) |
| SU (primary) | • Urinalysis (yes/no) and self-reported total score on the WHO-ASSIST score | |
| Viral suppression (exploratory) | • Viral load copies per ml of blood | |
| Adoption | Provider and organization perceptions of feasibility/acceptability and future uptake | • Qualitative interviews with providers and organizational leadership based on RE-AIM to assess perceptions and likelihood of uptake following the trial; longer-term adoption to be assessed in the subsequent trial following from this pilot study |
| Implementation | Feasibility | • Pragmatic implementation science measure based on RE-AIM (14-item feasibility subscale) [ • % assigned to the intervention who agree to enroll • Qualitative interviews with patients structured based on RE-AIM |
| Acceptability | • Pragmatic implementation science measure based on RE-AIM (15-item acceptability subscale) [ • Retention: % attending ≥ 1 session, % attending ≥ 75% of sessions, uptake of booster sessions, and % who dropped out of the intervention • Qualitative interviews with patients structured based on RE-AIM | |
| Intervention fidelity | • Independent rater and interventionist self-report on randomly selected 20% of intervention sessions | |
| Maintenance | Provider continued usage of Khanya to treat co-occurring SU and ART nonadherence | • To be evaluated in the subsequent trial following from this pilot study |
Fig. 1CONSORT diagram
Fig. 2Depiction of flipchart implementation strategy to promote fidelity in task sharing model