Reducing HIV-related Stigma in School Children in Northern Uganda
NCT ID: NCT04946071
Last Updated: 2024-11-22
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
2900 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-05-05
2024-01-06
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Purpose: The overall aim of the proposed study is to implement and evaluate an arts-based intervention rooted in local cultural knowledge to reduce stigma and improve HIV prevention outcomes among HIV positive and HIV- affected young people.
Methods: The study will employ a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized design involving crossover of clusters from the control to the intervention arm. The stepped-wedge design will consist of three groups (Group 1, Group 2, Group 3), each comprised of two primary and two secondary schools. Each time period will be 8 weeks in duration. Group 1 will receive the intervention for three time periods (24 weeks). Group 2 will receive the intervention over two time periods (16 weeks). Group 3 will receive the intervention over one time period (8 weeks). Formative qualitative interviews will also inform the arts-based HIV-stigma intervention and obtain additional data for research objectives. We will conduct at 50 qualitative semi-structured interviews, lasting between 30 minutes to 45 minutes, with purposively selected students, Elders, and teachers at participating schools. A community advisory committee (CAC) will inform all design elements and supervise implementation. Team members will collaborate to develop, implement, evaluate and disseminate results of the proposed study. Primary endpoints will include: 1) HIV stigma reduction; and, 2) knowledge increase. Secondary endpoints will include: 1) HIV testing frequency among sexually active participants; 2) linkage to care among HIV+ participants; 3) ART initiation among HIV+ participants; 4) ART adherence among HIV+ participants; and 5) viral suppression among HIV+ participants. Secondary endpoints will be measured through a local AIDS non-governmental organization (TASO) and the community health clinics who have agreed to provide access to their medical files. No blood samples will be drawn. Ages 10+ will participate in the study with parental consent.
Survey Data Analysis: Descriptive analyses will be used to describe clusters relative to their size at each time point (planned sample size and achieved sample size), key demographics and outcomes, and comparison of randomization groups. Main analyses will follow an intention-to-treat approach, with clusters analyzed as per original treatment assignment. Main analyses will use Linear Mixed Effect Models (LMEM) or Generalized Linear Mixed Effect Models (GLMEM) to assess the intervention effect. LMEM will be used for continuous outcomes that approach normality and GLMEM for binary and other types of outcomes. Normality will be assessed by the model residuals and outliers by Cook's Distance, Leverage and Residuals. Calendar time and school semester will be entered as fixed effects. The multilevel structure will be defined by participants as level 1 and clusters as level 2. All clustering levels will be specified as random effects. Sensitivity analyses will be performed of drop-outs and completers to better understand possible biases arising from attrition. A significance level of 0.05 will be used in all statistical tests.
Interview Data Analysis: Interviews will be coded using a constant-comparative and concept-development approach based on emergent themes that evolve throughout the course of the research. Initial coding will be done jointly by two researchers, and consensus negotiated. Matrix methodology techniques described by Miles, Huberman and Saldana will also be used in the analysis. First level analysis will be used to assign a descriptive code (label) to a segment of the data to give it meaning. As the researchers become more familiar with the data, pattern coding will be used to label emerging themes. An inductive approach will be used to analyze the data by iteratively coding and identifying themes and relationships between themes. Memos will be used to record methodological decisions and analytic insights. Validity will be assessed by convening focus groups for member checking the interpretation of data.
Significance: The study it will fill this evidence gap in HIV stigma intervention research and practice by creating and evaluating a transformative education and arts-based intervention using a participatory approach. The method of transforming cultural knowledge to an arts-based intervention may be a reproducible method for locally acceptable intervention design to improve HIV outcomes among young people.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
OTHER
NONE
Study Groups
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Control
Period in which each group will not receive the arts-based HIV stigma intervention.
No interventions assigned to this group
Group 1
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention for three 8-week periods (24 weeks). The intervention will begin with 5 weeks of two 2 interrelated activities: 1) Transformative educational activities that will engage learners in problem-based discussions; 2) Arts-based activities that will focus on addressing the "problem" through finding "solutions" and encouraging action will be accomplished by learning traditional Ugandan songs, dance, told and acted stories, proverbs and sayings that incorporate empowering messages and moral teachings connected with self and community, respect for self, peers and authority, and responsibility for others. These activities will be followed by 3 weeks of a participatory theatre intervention (PTI) developed by students that will summarize the learnings and cultural traditions from the weekly sessions.
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention
The intervention will consist of 2-hour weekly sessions offered to students in participating schools. HIV-related stigma will be addressed by providing key information related to HIV and stigma, facilitating the acquisition of coping skills, and utilizing local cultural practices facilitated by Elders using creative methods to shift existing social and cultural norms that produce and perpetuate stigmatization. Specific intervention activities will include three interrelated activities. The core 2-hour weekly session will cover (1) transformative educational activities; (2) arts-based activities; (3) a summative activity consisting of (3) participatory theatre activites.
Group 2
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention for two 8-week periods (16 weeks). Each intervention period will begin with 5 weeks of two 2 interrelated activities: 1) Transformative educational activities that will engage learners in problem-based discussions; 2) Arts-based activities that will focus on addressing the "problem" through finding "solutions" and encouraging action will be accomplished by learning traditional Ugandan songs, dance, told and acted stories, proverbs and sayings that incorporate empowering messages and moral teachings connected with self and community, respect for self, peers and authority, and responsibility for others. These activities will be followed by 3 weeks of a participatory theatre intervention (PTI) developed by students that will summarize the learnings and cultural traditions from the weekly sessions.
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention
The intervention will consist of 2-hour weekly sessions offered to students in participating schools. HIV-related stigma will be addressed by providing key information related to HIV and stigma, facilitating the acquisition of coping skills, and utilizing local cultural practices facilitated by Elders using creative methods to shift existing social and cultural norms that produce and perpetuate stigmatization. Specific intervention activities will include three interrelated activities. The core 2-hour weekly session will cover (1) transformative educational activities; (2) arts-based activities; (3) a summative activity consisting of (3) participatory theatre activites.
Group 3
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention for one 8-week period. The intervention period will begin with 5 weeks of two 2 interrelated activities: 1) Transformative educational activities that will engage learners in problem-based discussions; 2) Arts-based activities that will focus on addressing the "problem" through finding "solutions" and encouraging action will be accomplished by learning traditional Ugandan songs, dance, told and acted stories, proverbs and sayings that incorporate empowering messages and moral teachings connected with self and community, respect for self, peers and authority, and responsibility for others. These activities will be followed by 3 weeks of a participatory theatre intervention (PTI) developed by students that will summarize the learnings and cultural traditions from the weekly sessions.
Arts-based HIV stigma intervention
The intervention will consist of 2-hour weekly sessions offered to students in participating schools. HIV-related stigma will be addressed by providing key information related to HIV and stigma, facilitating the acquisition of coping skills, and utilizing local cultural practices facilitated by Elders using creative methods to shift existing social and cultural norms that produce and perpetuate stigmatization. Specific intervention activities will include three interrelated activities. The core 2-hour weekly session will cover (1) transformative educational activities; (2) arts-based activities; (3) a summative activity consisting of (3) participatory theatre activites.
Interventions
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Arts-based HIV stigma intervention
The intervention will consist of 2-hour weekly sessions offered to students in participating schools. HIV-related stigma will be addressed by providing key information related to HIV and stigma, facilitating the acquisition of coping skills, and utilizing local cultural practices facilitated by Elders using creative methods to shift existing social and cultural norms that produce and perpetuate stigmatization. Specific intervention activities will include three interrelated activities. The core 2-hour weekly session will cover (1) transformative educational activities; (2) arts-based activities; (3) a summative activity consisting of (3) participatory theatre activites.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Attending a government-funded primary and/or secondary school in the Omoro District
* Enrolled in primary grades 4-6 and secondary grades 1-3
* Those attending the following government-funded schools due to distance: Awere secondary school, Awere primary school, Dino primary school, Odek primary school, Agweno primary school, Jing Komi primary school, Acet primary school, Awali primary school, Aromo Wanglobo primary school, Binya primary school
10 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
OTHER_GOV
The AIDS Support Organization
OTHER
Waroco Kwo Elders Association
UNKNOWN
Omoro District Health Office
UNKNOWN
Omoro District Education Office
UNKNOWN
Thompson Rivers University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Bonnie Fournier
Associate Professor
Principal Investigators
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Bonnie Fournier, PhD RN
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Thompson Rivers University
Locations
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Omoro District
Palenga, , Uganda
Countries
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References
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Mendelsohn JB, Fournier B, Caron-Roy S, Maina G, Strudwick G, Ojok S, Lim HJ, Sanches M, Logie CH, Sommerfeldt S, Nykiforuk C, Harrowing J, Adyanga FA, Hakiigaba JO, Bilash O. Reducing HIV-related stigma among young people attending school in Northern Uganda: study protocol for a participatory arts-based population health intervention and stepped-wedge cluster-randomized trial. Trials. 2022 Dec 23;23(1):1043. doi: 10.1186/s13063-022-06643-9.
Other Identifiers
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102240
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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