London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SH, UK.
South Cloisters, University of Exeter, St Luke's Campus, Heavitree Road, Exeter, EX1 2 LU, UK.
Syst Rev. 2021 Jan 11;10(1):21. doi: 10.1186/s13643-020-01523-2.
Sexual risk, substance use, and mental ill health constitute a syndemic of co-occurring, mutually reinforcing epidemics amongst men who have sex with men (MSM). Developed since 1995, e-health interventions offer accessible, anonymous support and can be effective in addressing these outcomes, suggesting the potential value of developing e-health interventions that address these simultaneously amongst MSM. We conducted a systematic review of e-health interventions addressing one or more of these outcomes amongst MSM and in this paper describe the theories of change underpinning relevant interventions, what these offer and how they might complement each other.
We identified eligible reports via expert requests, reference-checking and database and Google searches. Results were screened for reports published in 1995 or later; focused on MSM; reporting on e-health interventions providing ongoing support to prevent HIV/STIs, sexual risk behaviour, substance use, anxiety or depression; and describing intervention theories of change. Reviewers assessed report quality, extracted intervention and theory of change data, and developed a novel method of synthesis using diagrammatic representations of theories of change.
Thirty-three reports on 22 intervention theories of change were included, largely of low/medium-quality. Inductively grouping these theories according to their core constructs, we identified three distinct groupings of theorised pathways. In the largest, the 'cognitive/skills' grouping, interventions provide information and activities which are theorised to influence behaviour via motivation/intention and self-efficacy/perceived control. In the 'self-monitoring' grouping, interventions are theorised to trigger reflection, self-reward/critique and self-regulation. In the 'cognitive therapy' grouping, the theory of change is rooted in cognitive therapy techniques, aiming to reframe negative emotions to improve mental health.
The synthesised theories of change provide a framework for developing e-health interventions that might holistically address syndemic health problems amongst MSM. Improving reporting on theories of change in primary studies of e-health interventions would enable a better understanding of how they are intended to work and the evidence supporting this. The novel diagrammatic method of theory of change synthesis used here could be used for future reviews where interventions are driven by existing well-defined behaviour and behaviour change theories.
PROSPERO CRD42018110317.
性风险、物质使用和心理健康不良是男男性行为者(MSM)中同时发生且相互加强的流行疫情的综合征。自 1995 年以来,电子健康干预措施提供了可及、匿名的支持,并在解决这些问题方面具有有效性,这表明开发同时针对 MSM 解决这些问题的电子健康干预措施具有潜在价值。我们对针对 MSM 中一个或多个这些结果的电子健康干预措施进行了系统评价,在此文中我们描述了相关干预措施的变革理论,这些干预措施提供了什么以及它们如何相互补充。
我们通过专家请求、参考文献检查以及数据库和 Google 搜索来确定符合条件的报告。结果筛选出了 1995 年或之后发表的报告;重点关注 MSM;报告电子健康干预措施为预防 HIV/性传播感染、性行为风险、物质使用、焦虑或抑郁提供持续支持;并描述了干预理论的变革。审查员评估报告质量、提取干预和变革理论数据,并使用变革理论的图表表示法开发了一种新的综合方法。
共有 33 份报告涉及 22 个干预理论的变革,其中大部分报告的质量为低/中。根据其核心结构归纳这些理论,我们根据三个不同的分组确定了三个理论的分组。在最大的“认知/技能”分组中,干预措施提供信息和活动,这些信息和活动通过动机/意图和自我效能/感知控制来影响行为。在“自我监测”分组中,干预措施被理论化为触发反思、自我奖励/批评和自我调节。在“认知疗法”分组中,变革理论植根于认知疗法技术,旨在通过重新构建负面情绪来改善心理健康。
综合变革理论为开发电子健康干预措施提供了一个框架,可以全面解决 MSM 中的综合征健康问题。在电子健康干预措施的初级研究中提高变革理论的报告将有助于更好地理解它们的预期工作方式和支持这一观点的证据。这里使用的变革理论综合的新颖图表方法可以用于未来的干预措施由现有明确界定的行为和行为改变理论驱动的审查。
PROSPERO CRD42018110317。