Early Community Client-LED ART Delivery in Nakivale Refugee Settlement
NCT ID: NCT04736316
Last Updated: 2023-07-11
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
92 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-06-29
2022-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Individuals will be offered research participation which will include an intake survey, an HIV test, and the option to participate in early community client-led ART delivery (early CCLAD) groups if diagnosed with HIV. Those interested in participating will have a consent form read aloud to them by a Research Assistant before being tested for HIV. Consent forms will be available in 4 languages: Runyankore, Kinyarwanda, Kiswahili and English, and will be read by multi-lingual Research Assistants. These individuals will be told at the outset that they can alternatively access free HIV testing at the outpatient department clinic if they prefer to not participate in any aspect of the research. After consent but prior to HIV testing, the investigators will conduct a baseline survey. This will include collection of contact information, demographic information, physical assessment, migration patterns, HIV testing history, perceived stigma, screening for mental disorders, and assessment of social support. Like the consent process, the survey will be available in 4 languages: Runyankore, Kinyarwanda, Kiswahili or English, and will be read aloud to participants with responses entered directly into a passcode-protected electronic tablet.
The first meeting of each Early CCLAD group will include an HIV clinic clinician. The first meeting is the one time in the intervention where participants will be compensated for their transportation to the clinic or to the meeting site (20,000 USH will be provided for each participant who attends this meeting). The HIV clinician, who will have been trained in the Early CCLAD group intervention, will help individuals in the group to understand their roles and responsibilities. The group will work together to plan future meeting dates and locations. The participants will decide if they would like to support the person responsible for picking up the ART each month (e.g. money, transportation, childcare, food). The participants will specify which dates they will be responsible to attend HIV clinic and pick up ART for the group. They will discern if they would like to identify a connecting activity to be integrated into their group (e.g. exercise, faith, livelihood, craft). The participant group will select a Team Leader to coordinate communication between the group and the healthcare facility. Finally, an important part of this first meeting is that the HIV clinician will conduct a standard comprehensive clinical exam and will refer each person/participant for any necessary laboratory testing.
Monthly "Early CCLAD" meetings: The "Early CCLAD" intervention will require monthly group meetings. This is intentionally more frequent than is suggested in the Ugandan Ministry of Health guidelines (which recommends visits every 3 months) as this intervention will occur at the time of diagnosis rather than when a person is deemed "stable" in care. Before the designated individual goes to clinic in any given month, they will be responsible for connecting with each group member to ask about how they are feeling and to see if they have any questions to ask of the HIV clinic staff. That individual will then attend HIV clinic and communicate about the status of each group member. They will collect information from the clinic and pre-packed ART for each group member. The "Early CCLAD" group will then meet at their predetermined location so that the individual who attended clinic can share information from the clinic and can distribute the ART to each person in the group. If a participant misses a CCLAD group, they can present to the HIV clinic to pick up their ART refill if a member of the group cannot arrange delivery or pickup.
Additional clinic attendance: All participants assigned to an "Early CCLAD" group will be expected to attend HIV clinic in person twice yearly for a clinical evaluation and a viral load check. The HIV clinician will work with the team to decide if they prefer their twice annual HIV clinic visits on the same day but individually, on the same day as a group, or individually on different schedules from others in the group. Additionally, individuals will attend clinic in person when they do not feel well, when they have any questions they prefer to ask the clinicians directly, when additional laboratory testing is required, and when requested by HIV clinic staff to optimize their medical care. In cases where the participants are deemed clinically unstable and are in need of regular clinical follow up (e.g. develops an opportunistic infection, develops other co-morbidity, has a viral load \> 1,000 copies/mL), clients will be asked to attend the clinic monthly with the rotating group member collecting group ART refill or to step in as the group member responsible for attending clinic that month. Individuals "Up referred" by HIV clinic staff to monthly HIV clinic visits should still participate in the "Early CCLAD" groups to receive psychosocial support and other benefits of community group care.
Option to stop the "Early CCLAD" group at any time: Participants can opt to stop Early CCLAD participation at any time. If willing, they will be asked to participate in a brief exit interview so the investigators can better understand what aspects of the intervention were acceptable or not acceptable to them.
"Early CCLAD" groups and HIV clinic connectedness: To ensure the Early CCLAD intervention participants remain well integrated into HIV clinic, the research staff will meet regularly with the HIV clinic staff to update them on the intervention and to discuss specific problems and specific individuals needing specialized care. Additionally, efforts will be made so that participant HIV clinic files and pre-packed medications are ready for the visit of the individual Early CCLAD group member each month. Finally, participants will be reminded frequently that they are expected and welcome to attend clinic when they do not feel well or when they have any questions or needs that are not being met through group care.
Follow-up data collection: Early CCLAD group participants will be given components of the intake survey (i.e. to assess mental health screening, perceived stigma, and social support) again 6-months after they began participation in the intervention. Some of this may occur in an interview setting which is recorded and then later transcribed. Additionally, data will be collected to assess retention in group care, ART medication pick-up, and HIV clinic outcomes.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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Early CCLAD
Early community client-led ART delivery groups
Early CCLAD
Community-based client led antiretroviral therapy delivery groups.
Interventions
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Early CCLAD
Community-based client led antiretroviral therapy delivery groups.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Subjects who do not test positive for HIV at health center will not be eligible to participate in the early community-based client-led antiretroviral therapy delivery intervention
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
University of Washington
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Kelli O'Laughlin
Assistant Professor, School of Medicine
Principal Investigators
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Kelli N O'Laughlin, MD, MPH
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Washington
Locations
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Nakivale Refugee Settlement
Isingiro, , Uganda
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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STUDY00008718
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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