Young Sean D
UCLA Department of Family Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, 10880 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 1800, Los Angeles, CA, 90024, USA,
AIDS Behav. 2014 Sep;18(9):1625-9. doi: 10.1007/s10461-013-0604-z.
This brief report describes results on study retention among minority men who have sex with men (MSM) from a 12-week, social networking-based, HIV prevention trial with 1-year follow-up. Participants, primarily minority MSM, were recruited using online and offline methods and randomly assigned to a Facebook (intervention or control) group. Participants completed a baseline survey and were asked to complete two follow-up surveys (12-week follow-up and 1-year post-intervention). 94 % of participants completed the first two surveys and over 82 % completed the baseline and both post-intervention surveys. Participants who spent a greater frequency of time online had almost twice the odds of completing all surveys. HIV negative participants, compared to those who were HIV positive, had over 25 times the odds of completing all surveys. HIV prevention studies on social networking sites can yield high participant retention rates.
本简要报告描述了一项针对男男性行为少数群体(MSM)的研究留存率结果,该研究为期12周,基于社交网络进行HIV预防试验,并进行了1年的随访。参与者主要是少数群体MSM,通过线上和线下方法招募,并随机分配到Facebook干预组或对照组。参与者完成了基线调查,并被要求完成两次随访调查(12周随访和干预后1年)。94%的参与者完成了前两次调查,超过82%的参与者完成了基线调查和两次干预后调查。上网时间频率较高的参与者完成所有调查的几率几乎是其他人的两倍。与HIV阳性参与者相比,HIV阴性参与者完成所有调查的几率是他们的25倍以上。在社交网站上进行的HIV预防研究可以获得较高的参与者留存率。