Stephenson Rob, Metheny Nicholas, Sharma Akshay, Sullivan Stephen, Riley Erin
School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
Center for Sexuality and Health Disparities, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2017 Nov 28;6(11):e237. doi: 10.2196/resprot.8562.
BACKGROUND: Transgender and gender nonconforming people experience some of the highest human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) rates in the United States, and experience many structural and behavioral barriers that may limit their engagement in HIV testing, prevention, and care. Evidence suggests that transgender and gender nonconforming youth (TY) are especially vulnerable to acquiring HIV, yet there is little research on TY and few services are targeted towards HIV testing, prevention, and care for this population. Telehealth presents an opportunity to mitigate some structural barriers that TY experience in accessing HIV testing, allowing TY to engage in HIV testing and counseling in a safe and nonjudgmental space of their choosing. Project Moxie is an HIV prevention intervention that pairs the use of HIV self-testing with remote video-based counseling and support from a trained, gender-affirming counselor. This study aims to offer a more positive HIV testing and counseling experience, with the goal of improving HIV testing frequency. OBJECTIVE: Project Moxie involves a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 200 TY aged 15-24 years, who are randomized on a 1:1 basis to control or intervention arms. The aim is to examine whether the addition of counseling provided via telehealth, coupled with home-based HIV testing, can create gains in routine HIV testing among TY over a six-month follow-up period. METHODS: This study implements a prospective pilot RCT of 200 TY recruited online. Participants in the control arm will receive one HIV self-testing kit and will be asked to report their results via the study's website. Participants in the experimental arm will receive one HIV self-testing kit and will test with a remotely-located counselor during a prescheduled video-counseling session. Participants are assessed at baseline, and at three and six months posttesting. RESULTS: Project Moxie was launched in June 2017 and recruitment is ongoing. As of August 21, 2017, the study had enrolled 130 eligible participants. CONCLUSIONS: Combining home-based HIV testing and video-based counseling allows TY, an often stigmatized and marginalized population, to test for HIV in a safe and nonjudgmental setting of their choosing. This approach creates an opportunity to reduce the high rate of HIV among TY through engagement in care, support, and linkage to the HIV treatment cascade for those who test positive. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03185975; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03185975 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6vIjHJ93s).
背景:在美国,跨性别者和性别不一致者感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的比例处于高位,并且面临诸多可能限制他们参与HIV检测、预防和治疗的结构性及行为性障碍。有证据表明,跨性别和性别不一致的青少年(TY)尤其容易感染HIV,但针对这一群体的研究较少,且几乎没有专门针对他们的HIV检测、预防和治疗服务。远程医疗为缓解TY在获取HIV检测时面临的一些结构性障碍提供了契机,使他们能够在自己选择的安全且无歧视的环境中进行HIV检测和咨询。“莫克西计划”是一项HIV预防干预措施,将HIV自我检测与来自经过培训的、具有性别认同意识的咨询师的远程视频咨询及支持相结合。本研究旨在提供更积极的HIV检测和咨询体验,目标是提高HIV检测频率。 目的:“莫克西计划”涉及一项针对200名年龄在15至24岁之间的TY的试点随机对照试验(RCT),这些参与者将按1:1的比例随机分配至对照组或干预组。目的是研究通过远程医疗提供咨询服务并结合家庭HIV检测,能否在为期六个月的随访期内使TY的常规HIV检测率有所提高。 方法:本研究对通过网络招募的200名TY实施一项前瞻性试点RCT。对照组的参与者将收到一套HIV自我检测试剂盒,并被要求通过研究网站报告检测结果。试验组的参与者将收到一套HIV自我检测试剂盒,并在预先安排的视频咨询时段与远程的咨询师一起进行检测。在基线期以及检测后的三个月和六个月对参与者进行评估。 结果:“莫克西计划”于2017年6月启动,招募工作正在进行中。截至2017年8月21日,该研究已招募了130名符合条件的参与者。 结论:将家庭HIV检测与视频咨询相结合,使得常受污名化和边缘化的TY群体能够在自己选择的安全且无歧视的环境中进行HIV检测。这种方法为通过参与护理、支持以及为检测呈阳性者建立与HIV治疗级联的联系来降低TY群体中高企的HIV感染率创造了机会。 试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03185975;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03185975(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6vIjHJ93s)
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