Pilot Intervention to Empower HIV Clients as Prevention Advocates in Uganda

NCT ID: NCT03435497

Last Updated: 2020-06-18

Study Results

Results available

Outcome measurements, participant flow, baseline characteristics, and adverse events have been published for this study.

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

99 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-04-16

Study Completion Date

2019-07-31

Brief Summary

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This randomized controlled pilot study of the "Game Changers" program will:

1. Assess the feasibility and acceptability of implementing an HIV prevention advocacy intervention with people living with HIV who are in HIV care, and who will be trained to be advocates of HIV protective behaviors within their social networks.
2. Assess preliminary intervention effects on a) protective behavior of the HIV-positive clients (condom use, partner concurrency/number of partners, engagement in HIV care, ART adherence); and b) diffusion of prevention messages across the network, as assessed by the content and extent of communication with network members about protective behaviors (condom use, partner concurrency/number of partners, HIV testing, engagement in HIV care, circumcision), HIV disclosure, and HIV stigma.
3. Explore characteristics of HIV-positive clients who more effectively engage in prevention advocacy (in terms of socio-demographics, network characteristics, and network position and type of alters receiving advocacy).

Detailed Description

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People living with HIV (PLWH) have a critical role to play in HIV prevention, not only in the context of Prevention for Positives and Treatment as Prevention, but as powerful change agents for HIV protective behaviors among others. Our research suggests that as PLWH receive HIV treatment and restore their health and functioning, many are motivated to protect their loved ones and engage in prevention advocacy (i.e., to encourage friends and family to seek HIV testing and treatment, and to reduce risk behavior); however, the quality of this advocacy is hampered by challenges related to message content, style and timing of delivery, and selection of advocacy recipients. With effective advocacy training, mobilizing PLWH to be change agents within their social networks has the potential to be a "game changer" for HIV prevention, particularly in high prevalence settings such as Uganda, where virtually every family is touched by someone living with HIV. Drawing upon theoretical frameworks for network-based interventions, such as theories of social diffusion, cognitive consistency, and social influence, the proposed study will develop and pilot test "Game Changers"-- an intervention that aims to empower and mobilize PLWH to be agents for HIV prevention and behavioral change in their social networks. In Phase 1, separate focus groups of PLWH and members of their social networks (family and friends) were conducted to explore barriers to and facilitators of mobilizing clients to advocate for HIV prevention, perceptions on how advocacy could be most effective in motivating behavior change, and how to best structure the intervention and its content. In Phase 2 findings from Phase 1 and network-based intervention models were used to develop the structure and content of an intervention designed to help clients cope with stigma, manage their disease, live positively, and develop motivation and skills for HIV disclosure and prevention advocacy. In Phase 3 a pilot group intervention will be conducted in a controlled trial of 96 clients, with 48 randomly assigned to receive the intervention and 48 to the wait-list control. Assessments will be administered to all participants at baseline, 5 months later, and again 8 months after baseline, after which the control group will receive the intervention (but not the interviews). PLWH interviews and social network assessments will examine intervention effects on protective behaviors of the participant (condom use, HIV treatment adherence), and diffusion of prevention messages across the network, as assessed by the content and extent of communication with network members about protective behaviors (condom use, partner concurrency/number of partners, HIV testing, engagement in HIV care, circumcision), HIV disclosure, and HIV stigma. At the end of the intervention period a focus group with program participants will be conducted to get feedback on the intervention. To help understand how participation in the program might affect health, date of HIV diagnosis, last two CD4 counts and HIV viral loads, and prescribed HIV medications will be obtained from PLWH participant medical charts. Participants (about 15/arm) will be asked to recruit up to 3 alters each, who know the participant's serostatus, to be interviewed to assess their HIV protective behaviors (e.g., condom use) and receipt of prevention advocacy from the intervention participant.

Conditions

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HIV

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Game Changers Intervention

Game Changers is an intervention that aims to empower and mobilize people living with HIV to be agents for HIV prevention and behavioral change in their social networks.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Game Changers

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Game Changers is an intervention that aims to empower and mobilize PLHA to be agents for HIV prevention and behavioral change in their social networks.

Control

The control group will receive standard of care during the intervention assessment period. All control participants will be offered the Game Changers program once all assessments for the primary study outcomes have been completed.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Game Changers

Game Changers is an intervention that aims to empower and mobilize PLHA to be agents for HIV prevention and behavioral change in their social networks.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* 18+ years old
* In HIV care for \> 1 year
* Having disclosed serostatus to at least one person


* 18+ years old
* Referred by a patient participant because they are family members, friends, or other people in patients' social network
* knows patient participant's serostatus
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Infectious Diseases Institute, Uganda

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

RAND

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Laura Bogart, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

RAND

Locations

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Infectious Diseases Institute

Kampala, , Uganda

Site Status

Countries

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Uganda

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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R34MH111460

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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