Center for Child and Community Health Research (CCHR), Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University Bayview Medical Center, 5200 Eastern Avenue, Mason F. Lord Bldg, Suite 4200, Baltimore, MD, 21224, USA.
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2022 Jul;51(5):2429-2436. doi: 10.1007/s10508-021-02159-6. Epub 2021 Nov 15.
Syphilis among men who have sex with men (MSM) has increased greatly in the past twenty years in the U.S. Geographically explicit ecological momentary assessment (GEMA), in which behaviors are geotagged and contextualized in time and space, may contribute to a greater understanding of transmission risk. The objective was to determine the acceptability and feasibility of GEMA for assessing HIV and syphilis transmission risk behaviors among a sample of MSM. Participants responded to a brief survey five times a day for two weeks. Feasibility was measured by participant recruitment, enrollment, prompts received and answered, geotagged prompts, and technical interference with data collection. Acceptability was measured by ratings of enjoyment and willingness for future participation. Summaries of five behavioral measures from the brief survey were calculated. Among the 83 participants contacted, 67.5% (56) expressed interest, 98% (55) were scheduled, and 81.8% (45) were enrolled. Participants answered 78.3% (2,277) of prompts received and 87.7% (1,998) of answered prompts were geotagged. Overall, 70.5% (31) enjoyed participating and 91.1% (41) were willing to participate in the future. Among prompts answered, missingness was low for five behavioral measures (range 0.2% (4) to 0.7% (16)). Feasibility and acceptability were high and missingness was low on behavioral measures in this MSM study population. Most participants reported that they would participate again. Future work should focus on whether GEMA improves our understanding of syphilis and HIV transmission risk.
过去二十年来,美国男男性行为者(MSM)中的梅毒感染率大幅上升。地理明确的生态瞬时评估(GEMA)可以将性行为在时间和空间上进行地理标记和情境化,这可能有助于更好地了解传播风险。本研究旨在确定 GEMA 评估 MSM 中 HIV 和梅毒传播风险行为的可接受性和可行性。参与者在两周内每天五次回复简短调查。通过参与者招募、入组、收到和回答的提示、地理标记的提示以及数据收集的技术干扰来衡量可行性。通过对未来参与的评价和意愿来衡量可接受性。从简短调查中计算了五个行为措施的汇总。在联系的 83 名参与者中,67.5%(56 人)表示有兴趣,98%(55 人)被安排,81.8%(45 人)入组。参与者回答了收到的提示的 78.3%(2,277),并对 87.7%(1,998)回答的提示进行了地理标记。总体而言,70.5%(31 人)喜欢参与,91.1%(41 人)愿意未来参与。在回答的提示中,五个行为措施的缺失率较低(范围为 0.2%(4)至 0.7%(16))。在这个 MSM 研究人群中,GEMA 的可行性和可接受性都很高,行为措施的缺失率也很低。大多数参与者表示他们会再次参与。未来的工作应重点关注 GEMA 是否能提高我们对梅毒和 HIV 传播风险的理解。