Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Department of Health Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2019 Jul;22 Suppl 4(Suppl Suppl 4):e25309. doi: 10.1002/jia2.25309.
The HIV prevention cascade could be used in developing interventions to strengthen implementation of efficacious HIV prevention methods, but its practical utility needs to be demonstrated. We propose a standardized approach to using the cascade to guide identification and evaluation of interventions and demonstrate its feasibility for this purpose through a project to develop interventions to improve HIV prevention methods use by adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) and potential male partners in east Zimbabwe.
We propose a six-step approach to using a published generic HIV prevention cascade formulation to develop interventions to increase motivation to use, access to and effective use of an HIV prevention method. These steps are as follows: (1) measure the HIV prevention cascade for the chosen population and method; (2) identify gaps in the cascade; (3) identify explanatory factors (barriers) contributing to observed gaps; (4) review literature to identify relevant theoretical frameworks and interventions; (5) tailor interventions to the local context; and (6) implement and evaluate the interventions using the cascade steps and explanatory factors as outcome indicators in the evaluation design. In the Zimbabwe example, steps 1-5 aided development of four interventions to overcome barriers to effective use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in AGYW (15-24 years) and voluntary medical male circumcision in male partners (15-29). For young men, prevention cascade analyses identified gaps in motivation and access as barriers to voluntary medical male circumcision uptake, so an intervention was designed including financial incentives and an education session. For AGYW, gaps in motivation (particularly lack of risk perception) and access were identified as barriers to PrEP uptake: an interactive counselling game was developed addressing these barriers. A text messaging intervention was developed to improve PrEP adherence among AGYW, addressing reasons underlying lack of effective PrEP use through improving the capacity ("skills") to take PrEP effectively. A community-led intervention (community conversations) was developed addressing community-level factors underlying gaps in motivation, access and effective use. These interventions are being evaluated currently using outcomes from the HIV prevention cascade (step 6).
The prevention cascade can guide development and evaluation of interventions to strengthen implementation of HIV prevention methods by following the proposed process.
HIV 预防级联可用于制定干预措施,以加强有效的 HIV 预防方法的实施,但需要证明其实际效用。我们提出了一种标准化方法,通过在津巴布韦东部开展项目来开发干预措施以改善青少年女孩和年轻妇女(AGYW)及其潜在男性伴侣对艾滋病毒预防方法的使用,用预防级联来指导干预措施的识别和评估,并证明其在这方面的可行性。
我们提出了一个六步方法,使用已发表的通用 HIV 预防级联公式来开发干预措施,以增加动机、获得和有效使用 HIV 预防方法。这些步骤如下:(1)针对选定的人群和方法测量 HIV 预防级联;(2)确定级联中的差距;(3)确定导致观察到的差距的解释因素(障碍);(4)回顾文献以确定相关的理论框架和干预措施;(5)根据当地情况调整干预措施;(6)在评估设计中,使用级联步骤和解释因素作为结果指标来实施和评估干预措施。在津巴布韦的例子中,步骤 1-5 有助于制定四项干预措施,以克服 AGYW(15-24 岁)中有效使用暴露前预防(PrEP)和男性伴侣中自愿医疗男性包皮环切术的障碍(15-29)。对于年轻男性,预防级联分析确定了动机和获得方面的差距是自愿医疗男性包皮环切术使用率低的障碍,因此设计了一项包括经济激励和教育课程的干预措施。对于 AGYW,动机方面的差距(特别是缺乏风险感知)和获得方面的差距被确定为 PrEP 使用率低的障碍:开发了一个互动咨询游戏来解决这些障碍。开发了一个短信干预措施,通过提高有效使用 PrEP 的能力(“技能”)来提高 PrEP 的依从性,以解决 PrEP 使用效果不佳的根本原因。开展了一项以社区为基础的干预措施(社区对话),以解决动机、获得和有效使用方面差距的社区层面因素。目前正在使用 HIV 预防级联的结果(步骤 6)评估这些干预措施。
通过遵循提议的流程,预防级联可以指导干预措施的制定和评估,以加强 HIV 预防方法的实施。