Wechsberg Wendee M, Zule William A, Ndirangu Jacqueline, Kline Tracy L, Rodman Nathaniel F, Doherty Irene A, Novak Scott P, van der Horst Charles M
RTI International, 3040 E, Cornwallis Road, PO Box 12194, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2194, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Oct 15;14:1074. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-1074.
South Africa has 6.4 million adults over the age of 15 living with HIV. Gender inequality issues continue to drive the HIV epidemic in South Africa, where Black African women bear the greatest HIV burden. Limited access to services; little capacity to negotiate sex and condom use; and other legal, social, and economic inequities make women highly vulnerable to HIV infection. Behavioral interventions have been shown to decrease risk behaviors, but they have been less successful in reducing HIV incidence. Conversely, biomedical prevention strategies have proven to be successful in reducing HIV incidence, but require behavioral interventions to increase uptake and adherence. Consequently, there is a need for integrated approaches that combine biomedical and behavioral interventions. Effective combination prevention efforts should comprise biomedical, behavioral, and structural programming proven in randomized trials that focuses on the driving forces and key populations at higher risk of HIV infection and transmission.
METHODS/DESIGN: This prospective, geographically clustered randomized field experiment is enrolling participants into two arms: a control arm that receives standard HIV testing and referral for treatment; and an intervention arm that receives an evidence-based, woman-focused behavioral intervention that emphasizes risk reduction and retention, the Women's Health CoOp. We divided the city of Pretoria into 14 mutually exclusive geographic zones and randomized these zones into either the control arm or the intervention arm. Outreach workers are recruiting drug-using women from each zone. At baseline, eligible participants complete a questionnaire and biological testing for HIV, recent drug use, and pregnancy. Follow-up interviews are completed at 6 and 12 months.
The biobehavioral intervention in this study merges an efficacious behavioral HIV prevention intervention for women with biomedical prevention through HIV treatment as prevention using a Seek, Test, Treat and Retain strategy. This combination biobehavioral intervention is designed to (1) improve the quality of life and reduce HIV infectiousness among women who are HIV positive, and (2) reduce HIV risk behaviors among women regardless of their HIV status. If efficacious, this intervention could help control the HIV epidemic in South Africa.
Trial registration no: NCT01497405.
南非有640万15岁以上的成年人感染了艾滋病毒。性别不平等问题继续推动着南非的艾滋病毒疫情,其中非洲黑人女性承受着最大的艾滋病毒负担。获得服务的机会有限;缺乏协商性行为和使用避孕套的能力;以及其他法律、社会和经济不平等因素,使女性极易感染艾滋病毒。行为干预已被证明可以减少危险行为,但在降低艾滋病毒发病率方面成效较小。相反,生物医学预防策略已被证明在降低艾滋病毒发病率方面是成功的,但需要行为干预来提高接受率和依从性。因此,需要将生物医学和行为干预相结合的综合方法。有效的联合预防措施应包括在随机试验中得到验证的生物医学、行为和结构性规划,重点关注艾滋病毒感染和传播风险较高的驱动因素和关键人群。
方法/设计:这项前瞻性、地理聚类随机现场试验将参与者分为两组:一组是接受标准艾滋病毒检测和转介治疗的对照组;另一组是接受基于证据、以女性为重点的行为干预的干预组,该干预强调降低风险和保持参与,即妇女健康合作社项目。我们将比勒陀利亚市分为14个相互独立的地理区域,并将这些区域随机分为对照组或干预组。外展工作人员正在从每个区域招募吸毒女性。在基线时,符合条件的参与者完成一份问卷,并进行艾滋病毒、近期吸毒和怀孕情况的生物检测。在6个月和12个月时完成随访访谈。
本研究中的生物行为干预将一种有效的针对女性的艾滋病毒预防行为干预与通过以检测、治疗和保持为策略的艾滋病毒治疗进行生物医学预防相结合。这种联合生物行为干预旨在:(1)改善艾滋病毒呈阳性女性的生活质量并降低其艾滋病毒传染性;(2)降低无论艾滋病毒感染状况如何的女性的艾滋病毒危险行为。如果有效,这种干预措施有助于控制南非的艾滋病毒疫情。
试验注册号:NCT01497405。