Batchelder Abigail W, Moskowitz Judith T, Jain Jennifer, Cohn Michael, Earle Maya A, Carrico Adam W
Massachusetts General Hospital/ Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Cogn Behav Pract. 2020 Feb;27(1):55-69. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpra.2019.03.001. Epub 2019 Apr 16.
Internalized stigma, shame, and other negative self-conscious emotions are inadequately addressed barriers to HIV-related self-care, particularly among people actively using substances. Innovative approaches are needed to optimize antiretroviral treatment (ART) adherence as well as engagement in HIV care among people living with HIV and substance use disorders. Based on qualitative feedback from providers and patients, we iteratively developed and conducted a proof-of-concept study of a relatively brief transdiagnostic emotion regulation intervention designed to improve ART adherence care by addressing behavioral and psychological barriers, including internalized stigma and shame, among people living with HIV and active substance use disorders. The final intervention included 5 individual sessions focused on metacognitive awareness of emotions and thoughts, cognitive reframing of dysfunctional thoughts about the self using concepts such as self-compassion, and identifying and reaching the participants' personalized HIV-self-care goal(s). All participants received daily texts querying current emotion and weekly texts querying ART adherence and substance use. To extend the effects of the intervention, we developed a personalized bi-directional text component through which participants received their personalized compassionate self-statements, informed by the intervention content, in response to their answers to emotion queries for 8 weeks after the 5 sessions. The texts modeled using compassionate self-statements as a form of cognitive reframing, consistent with cognitive restructuring of distorted core beliefs. We consented 10 participants living with HIV and problematic substance use in the proof-of-concept pilot. Of the 8 participants who completed all intervention sessions, participants replied to 70% of all text messages sent. All 8 reported strong acceptability of the intervention content. This emotion-focused, technology-enhanced intervention demonstrated proof-of-concept, in that this patient population would participate in this intervention. A larger randomized controlled pilot is needed to determine feasibility and acceptability among people living with HIV and substance use disorders, a hard-to-reach and underserved population.
内化的耻辱感、羞耻感和其他负面的自我意识情绪是与艾滋病毒相关的自我护理中未得到充分解决的障碍,尤其是在积极使用药物的人群中。需要创新方法来优化抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的依从性,以及提高艾滋病毒感染者和药物使用障碍患者对艾滋病毒护理的参与度。基于提供者和患者的定性反馈,我们反复开发并开展了一项概念验证研究,该研究针对一种相对简短的跨诊断情绪调节干预措施,旨在通过解决行为和心理障碍,包括内化的耻辱感和羞耻感,来改善艾滋病毒感染者和活跃药物使用障碍患者的ART依从性护理。最终的干预措施包括5次个体治疗,重点是对情绪和思维的元认知意识、使用自我同情等概念对关于自我的功能失调思维进行认知重构,以及确定并实现参与者个性化的艾滋病毒自我护理目标。所有参与者每天都会收到询问当前情绪的短信,每周会收到询问ART依从性和药物使用情况的短信。为了扩大干预效果,我们开发了一个个性化的双向短信组件,通过该组件,参与者在5次治疗后的8周内,根据他们对情绪询问的回答,收到根据干预内容生成的个性化同情自我陈述。这些短信以同情自我陈述作为认知重构的一种形式,与扭曲核心信念的认知重建相一致。在概念验证试点中,我们招募了10名艾滋病毒感染者和有药物使用问题的参与者。在完成所有干预疗程的8名参与者中,参与者回复了所发送所有短信的70%。所有8名参与者都表示对干预内容的接受度很高。这种以情绪为重点、技术强化的干预措施证明了概念,即该患者群体愿意参与这种干预。需要进行更大规模的随机对照试点,以确定艾滋病毒感染者和药物使用障碍患者(这是一个难以接触且服务不足的群体)中的可行性和可接受性。