Dulli Lisa, Ridgeway Kathleen, Packer Catherine, Plourde Kate F, Mumuni Tolulope, Idaboh Tosin, Olumide Adesola, Ojengbede Oladosu, McCarraher Donna R
Department of Program Sciences and Technical Support, Health Services Research, Family Health International (FHI 360), Durham, NC, United States.
Department of Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, Family Health International (FHI 360), Durham, NC, United States.
JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2018 Nov 28;4(4):e12397. doi: 10.2196/12397.
Adolescents living with HIV (ALHIVs) enrolled in HIV treatment services experience greater loss to follow-up and suboptimal adherence than other age groups. HIV-related stigma, disclosure-related issues, lack of social support, and limited HIV knowledge impede adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and retention in HIV services. The 90-90-90 goals for ALHIVs will only be met through strategies targeted to meet their specific needs.
We aimed to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a social media-based intervention to improve HIV knowledge, social support, ART adherence, and retention among ALHIV aged 15-19 years on ART in Nigeria.
We conducted a single-group pre-post test study from June 2017 to January 2018. We adapted an existing support group curriculum and delivered it through trained facilitators in 5 support groups by using Facebook groups. This pilot intervention included five 1-week sessions. We conducted structured interviews with participants before and after the intervention, extracted clinical data, and documented intervention implementation and participation. In-depth interviews were conducted with a subset of participants at study completion. Quantitative data from structured interviews and group participation data were summarized descriptively, and qualitative data were coded and summarized.
A total of 41 ALHIV enrolled in the study. At baseline, 93% of participants reported existing phone access; 65% used the internet, and 64% were Facebook users. In addition, 37 participants completed the 5-session intervention, 32 actively posted comments in at least one session online, and at least half commented in each of the 5 sessions. Facilitators delivered most sessions as intended and on-time. Participants were enthusiastic about the intervention. Aspects of the intervention liked most by participants included interacting with other ALHIVs; learning about HIV; and sharing questions, experiences, and fears. The key recommendations were to include larger support groups and encourage more group interaction. Specific recommendations on various intervention components were made to improve the intervention.
This novel intervention was feasible to implement in a predominantly suburban and rural Nigerian setting. Social media may be leveraged to provide much-needed information and social support on platforms accessible and familiar to many people, even in resource-constrained communities. Our findings have been incorporated into the intervention, and an outcome study is underway.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03076996; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03076996 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/73oCCEBBC).
与其他年龄组相比,接受艾滋病毒治疗服务的青少年艾滋病毒感染者(ALHIVs)失访情况更严重,依从性也欠佳。与艾滋病毒相关的耻辱感、披露相关问题、缺乏社会支持以及艾滋病毒知识有限,都阻碍了抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)的依从性以及在艾滋病毒服务中的留存率。要实现针对ALHIVs的90-90-90目标,只能通过针对满足其特定需求的策略来达成。
我们旨在评估实施一项基于社交媒体的干预措施的可行性,以提高尼日利亚15至19岁接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的ALHIVs的艾滋病毒知识、社会支持、抗逆转录病毒疗法依从性及留存率。
我们于2017年6月至2018年1月开展了一项单组前后测研究。我们改编了现有的支持小组课程,并通过经过培训的主持人,利用脸书群组在5个支持小组中进行授课。这项试点干预包括五个为期1周的课程。我们在干预前后对参与者进行了结构化访谈,提取了临床数据,并记录了干预措施的实施情况和参与情况。在研究结束时,对一部分参与者进行了深入访谈。对结构化访谈的定量数据和小组参与数据进行了描述性总结,对定性数据进行了编码和总结。
共有41名ALHIVs参与了该研究。在基线时,93%的参与者报告称可以使用手机;65%使用互联网,64%是脸书用户。此外,37名参与者完成了5个课程的干预,32人至少在一个课程中积极发表了评论,并且在5个课程中的每个课程中至少有一半人发表了评论。主持人大多按计划准时完成了大部分课程。参与者对该干预措施充满热情。参与者最喜欢的干预措施方面包括与其他ALHIVs互动;了解艾滋病毒;以及分享问题、经历和恐惧。关键建议是纳入更大的支持小组并鼓励更多的小组互动。针对干预措施的各个组成部分提出了具体建议,以改进干预措施。
在尼日利亚以郊区和农村为主的环境中实施这种新颖的干预措施是可行的。即使在资源有限的社区,也可以利用社交媒体在许多人可访问且熟悉的平台上提供急需的信息和社会支持。我们的研究结果已纳入干预措施,一项结果研究正在进行中。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03076996;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03076996(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/73oCCEBBC)