Schensul Jean J, Ha Toan, Schensul Stephen, Sarna Avina, Bryant Kendall
Institute for Community Research, Ste 100, 146 Wyllys Street, Hartford, CT, 06117, USA.
Department of Community Medicine, University of Connecticut Health, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT, 06030-6325, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2017 Nov;21(Suppl 2):228-242. doi: 10.1007/s10461-017-1916-1.
People living with HIV (PLHIV) on anti-retroviral treatment (ART) who drink are less adherent and more likely to engage in unprotected sex but the connections among these events are correlational. Using an adapted Timeline Follow-Back (A-TLFB) procedure, this paper examines the day by day interface of alcohol, medication adherence and sex to provide a fine grained understanding of how multiple behavioral risks coincide in time and space, explores concordance/discordance of measures with survey data and identifies potential recall bias. Data are drawn from a survey of behavior, knowledge and attitudes, and a 30 day TLFB assessment of multiple risk behaviors adapted for the Indian PLHIV context, administered to 940 alcohol-consuming, HIV positive men on ART at the baseline evaluation stage of a multilevel, multi-centric intervention study. On days participants drank they were significantly more likely to be medication non-adherent and to have unprotected sex. In the first day after their alcohol consuming day, the pattern of nonadherence persisted. Binge and regular drinking days were associated with nonadherence but only binge drinking co-occurred with unprotected sex. Asking about specific "drinking days" improved recall for drinking days and number of drinks consumed. Recall declined for both drinking days and nonadherence from the first week to subsequent weeks but varied randomly for sex risk. There was high concordance and low discordance between A-TLFB drinking and nonadherence but these results were reversed for unprotected sex. Moving beyond simple drinking-adherence correlational analysis, the A-TLFB offers improved recall probes and provides researchers and interventionists with the opportunity to identify types of risky days and tailor behavioral modification to reduce alcohol consumption, nonadherence and risky sex on those days.
接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的艾滋病毒感染者(PLHIV)饮酒后依从性会降低,且更有可能进行无保护性行为,但这些事件之间的联系只是相关性的。本文采用一种经过调整的时间线回溯法(A-TLFB),研究酒精、药物依从性和性行为之间日复一日的相互关系,以便更细致地了解多种行为风险如何在时间和空间上同时出现,探讨这些测量结果与调查数据的一致性/不一致性,并识别潜在的回忆偏差。数据来自一项行为、知识和态度调查,以及对940名在多层面、多中心干预研究基线评估阶段接受ART治疗的饮酒的HIV阳性男性进行的30天多种风险行为的时间线回溯法评估,该评估针对印度PLHIV的情况进行了调整。在参与者饮酒的日子里,他们更有可能不坚持服药并进行无保护性行为。在饮酒日之后的第一天,不依从的模式依然存在。暴饮和经常饮酒的日子与不依从有关,但只有暴饮与无保护性行为同时出现。询问具体的“饮酒日”能提高对饮酒日和饮酒量的回忆。从第一周到后续几周,饮酒日和不依从的回忆都有所下降,但性行为风险的回忆则随机变化。A-TLFB法测量的饮酒和不依从之间一致性高、不一致性低,但无保护性行为的结果则相反。超越简单的饮酒与依从性的相关性分析,A-TLFB法提供了更好的回忆探查方法,为研究人员和干预人员提供了机会,以识别风险日的类型,并针对性地进行行为改变,以减少这些日子里的酒精消费、不依从和危险性行为。