刑事司法涉案男男性行为人群中 HIV、性传播感染和物质使用连续护理干预措施:系统评价。

HIV, Sexually Transmitted Infection, and Substance Use Continuum of Care Interventions Among Criminal Justice-Involved Black Men Who Have Sex With Men: A Systematic Review.

机构信息

Nina T. Harawa is with the Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles. At the time of the study, Russell Brewer was with the HIV/STI Portfolio, Louisiana Public Health Institute, New Orleans. Victoria Buckman is with The Chicago Center for HIV Elimination, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Santhoshini Ramani, Aditya Khanna, and John A. Schneider are with the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago. Kayo Fujimoto is with the Division of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

出版信息

Am J Public Health. 2018 Nov;108(S4):e1-e9. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2018.304698.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Because Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) experience high rates of both HIV and incarceration relative to other groups, the various stages of criminal justice involvement may serve as important intervention points for addressing HIV and related conditions in this group. Although systematic reviews of HIV interventions targeting MSM in general and BMSM in particular exist, no review has explored the range and impact of HIV, sexually transmitted infection (STI), and substance use prevention and care continuum interventions focused on criminal justice-involved (CJI) populations.

OBJECTIVES

To describe the range and impact of published HIV, STI, and related substance use interventions for US-based CJI populations and to understand their relevance for BMSM.

SEARCH METHODS

We conducted systematic searches in the following databases: PubMed, MEDLINE, Cochrane, CINAHL, and PsycINFO, covering the period preceding December 1, 2016.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We selected articles in scientific publications involving quantitative findings for studies of US-based interventions that focused on CJI individuals, with outcomes related to sexual or substance use risk behaviors, HIV, or STIs. We excluded studies if they provided no demographic information, had minimal representation of the population of interest (< 30 African American or Black male or transgender participants), had study populations limited to those aged younger than 18 years, or were limited to evaluations of preexisting programs.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We abstracted data from these articles on study design; years covered; study location; participant number, demographics, and sexual orientation (if available); criminal justice setting or type; health condition; targeted outcomes; and key findings. We scored studies by using the Downs and Black quality and bias assessment. We conducted linear regression to examine changes in study quality by publication year.

MAIN RESULTS

Fifty-eight articles met inclusion criteria, including 8 (13.8%) modeling or cost-effectiveness studies and 13 (22.4%) randomized controlled trials. Just 3 studies (5.2%) focused on sexual or gender minorities, with only 1 focused on BMSM. In most studies (n = 36; 62.1%), however, more than 50% of participants were Black. The most common intervention addressed screening, including 20 empirical studies and 7 modeling studies. Education-focused interventions were also common (n = 15) and usually employed didactic rather than skill-building approaches. They were more likely to demonstrate increases in HIV testing, knowledge, and condom-use intentions than reductions in sex- and drug-risk behaviors. Screening programs consistently indicated cost-effectiveness, including with BMSM. Care continuum interventions for people living with HIV showed mixed results; just 3 involved randomized controlled trials, and these interventions did not show significant differences compared with control conditions. A minority of programs targeted non-custody-based CJI populations, despite their constituting a majority of the CJI population at any given time.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Screening CJI populations for HIV and other STIs is effective and cost-efficient and holds promise for reducing HIV in BMSM. Education-based and care provision interventions also hold promise for addressing HIV, STIs, mental health, and substance use in CJI populations. Additional empirical and modeling studies and results specific to sexual minorities are needed; their paucity represents a disparity in how HIV is addressed. Public Health Implications. HIV and STI screening programs focused on CJI populations should be a priority for reducing HIV risk and numbers of undiagnosed infections among BMSM. Funding agencies and public health leaders should prioritize research to improve the knowledge base regarding which care continuum intervention approaches are most effective for BMSM with criminal justice involvement. Developments in modeling approaches could allow researchers to simulate the impacts and costs of criminal justice involvement-related interventions that might otherwise be cost, time, or ethically prohibitive to study empirically.

摘要

背景

由于与其他群体相比,男男性行为者(MSM)黑人男性经历 HIV 和监禁的比率都很高,因此刑事司法参与的各个阶段可能是解决该群体中 HIV 及相关疾病的重要切入点。虽然已经有针对一般男男性行为者(MSM)和特定的男男性行为者黑人(BMSM)的 HIV 干预措施的系统评价,但没有一项审查探讨了针对刑事司法参与(CJI)人群的 HIV、性传播感染(STI)和物质使用预防和护理连续体干预措施的范围和影响。

目的

描述针对美国 CJI 人群的已发表的 HIV、STI 和相关物质使用预防和护理连续体干预措施的范围和影响,并了解其与 BMSM 的相关性。

检索方法

我们在以下数据库中进行了系统检索:PubMed、MEDLINE、Cochrane、CINAHL 和 PsycINFO,涵盖了 2016 年 12 月 1 日之前的时间段。

选择标准

我们选择了涉及美国干预措施的科学出版物中的定量研究,这些研究侧重于 CJI 个体,其结果与性或物质使用风险行为、HIV 或 STI 相关。如果研究没有提供人口统计信息、对感兴趣的人群(<30 名非裔美国男性或跨性别参与者)代表性不足、研究人群仅限于 18 岁以下或仅限于评估现有计划,我们将排除这些研究。

数据收集和分析

我们从这些文章中提取了有关研究设计、涵盖年份、研究地点、参与者人数、人口统计学和性取向(如果有)、刑事司法环境或类型、健康状况、目标结果和主要发现的信息。我们使用 Downs 和 Black 质量和偏差评估对研究进行评分。我们进行线性回归,以检查研究质量随出版年份的变化。

主要结果

58 篇文章符合纳入标准,包括 8 篇(13.8%)建模或成本效益研究和 13 篇(22.4%)随机对照试验。只有 3 项研究(5.2%)关注性或性别少数群体,只有 1 项研究关注 BMSM。然而,在大多数研究中(n=36;62.1%),超过 50%的参与者是黑人。最常见的干预措施是筛查,包括 20 项实证研究和 7 项建模研究。以教育为重点的干预措施也很常见(n=15),并且通常采用说教而不是技能培养的方法。与性行为和药物风险行为的减少相比,它们更有可能增加 HIV 检测、知识和 condom 使用意向。筛查计划始终表明具有成本效益,包括针对 BMSM 的计划。针对 HIV 感染者的护理连续体干预措施的结果喜忧参半;只有 3 项涉及随机对照试验,与对照条件相比,这些干预措施没有显示出显著差异。少数计划针对非拘留型 CJI 人群,尽管在任何特定时间,他们都构成了 CJI 人群的大多数。

作者结论

对 CJI 人群进行 HIV 和其他 STI 的筛查是有效且具有成本效益的,有望减少 BMSM 中的 HIV。基于教育和护理提供的干预措施也有望解决 CJI 人群中的 HIV、性传播感染、心理健康和物质使用问题。需要更多的实证和建模研究以及针对性少数群体的结果;它们的缺乏代表了 HIV 处理方式的差异。公共卫生意义。针对 CJI 人群的 HIV 和 STI 筛查计划应成为减少 BMSM 中 HIV 风险和未确诊感染人数的优先事项。资助机构和公共卫生领导人应优先研究哪些护理连续体干预措施对涉及刑事司法的 BMSM 最有效。建模方法的发展可以使研究人员能够模拟可能因成本、时间或伦理原因而无法进行实证研究的刑事司法参与相关干预措施的影响和成本。

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