| Literature DB >> 32720253 |
Jade Pagkas-Bather1,2, Lindsay E Young3,4, Yen-Tyng Chen3,4, John A Schneider3,4,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Network interventions for HIV prevention represent a potential area for growth in a globalizing world, where persons are more easily connected to one another through social media and networking applications. The basic tenets of network interventions such as (1) selection of a change agent, (2) segmentation, (3) induction, and (4) alteration represent myriad ways to structure network interventions for HIV prevention with the potential for large public health impact. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: HIV; Intervention; MSM; Networks; PrEP; Prevention; Sex
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32720253 PMCID: PMC7497372 DOI: 10.1007/s11904-020-00524-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr HIV/AIDS Rep ISSN: 1548-3568 Impact factor: 5.071
Four types of network interventions
| Intervention typology | Key players | Examples | Studies employing network intervention | Future directions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type I. Change agent | Popular opinion leaders (POL)—those selected by a group as influential within a network context | Use of participants with large social networks to recruit participants | Young et al., 2018 | Better and more precise identification of POL in network interventions to galvanize others for change through use of social media or stakeholder interviewing |
| Popular gay men were recruited to provide HIV education resulting in decreased unprotected anal intercourse | Kelly et al., 1997 | |||
| Training Black MSM POL reduced unprotected anal intercourse | Jones et al., 2008 | |||
| Participants linked to POL vs. AIDS education group and both groups had decreased HIV risk behavior | NIMH, 2010 | |||
| Type II. Segmentation | Group level interventions which gain in popularity among individuals such as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter | Participants linked to PrEP peer leaders | Patel et al., 2018 | Development of various communication strategies for addressing different groups for the same intervention |
| Trained house ball leaders to disseminate safe sex information leading to decreased HIV risk behaviors | Hosek et al., 2015 | |||
| Type III. Induction | Word of mouth interventions that impact the spread of behavior—the process by which an internet article “goes viral” | HIV+ persons recruited within their networks to increase testing | Kimbrough et al., 2009 | Increased utilization of respondent driven sampling in studies and network interventions |
| Type IV. Alteration | Identification of social supports among HIV-positive women in order to increase membership within the network | HIV+ women encouraged to expand their support network through dyadic relationships | Wingood et al., 2004 | Linking HIV positive persons to support groups based on pre-identified social needs |