Aronson Ian David, Zhang Jingru, Rajan Sonali
Digital Health Empowerment, Brooklyn, USA.
School of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, USA.
Int J Health Promot Educ. 2021;59(6):354-365. doi: 10.1080/14635240.2021.1918568. Epub 2021 Apr 23.
Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends routine HIV testing in emergency departments and other facilities, many patients are never offered testing, and those who are offered testing frequently decline. In response, our team developed and evaluated a series of differently configured technology-based interventions to explore how we can most effectively increase HIV testing among reluctant patients. The current study examines how different videos (onscreen physician vs. onscreen community member), and different intervention configurations (enabling some participants to select a video while others are assigned to watch a video or to view bullet-point text), could potentially increase self-efficacy to test for HIV among patients who had never tested. Analyses of data from 285 emergency department patients in New York City who declined HIV testing offered by hospital staff indicated that participants reported highly significant differences in self-efficacy depending on their history of previous testing, whether they were enabled to select a video or were assigned a video, and which video they watched. Participants who reported no previous testing reported significantly lower pre-test self-efficacy compared to those who had tested at least once before. Among those who had not previously tested, the greatest pre-post increases in self-efficacy were reported by participants who were randomly enabled to select an intervention video and chose to watch video depicting a physician. Our findings highlight the importance, not only of intervention content, but how that content is delivered to specific participants. These findings may inform more effective technology-based behavioral health interventions.
尽管疾病控制与预防中心建议在急诊科及其他医疗机构进行常规的HIV检测,但许多患者从未接受检测,而那些被提供检测的患者也常常拒绝。作为回应,我们的团队开发并评估了一系列不同配置的基于技术的干预措施,以探索如何最有效地增加不情愿接受检测的患者群体中的HIV检测率。当前的研究考察了不同的视频(屏幕上的医生与屏幕上的社区成员)以及不同的干预配置(让一些参与者选择视频,而另一些参与者被指定观看视频或查看要点文本)如何可能提高从未进行过检测的患者进行HIV检测的自我效能感。对纽约市285名拒绝医院工作人员提供的HIV检测的急诊科患者的数据进行分析表明,参与者报告称,根据他们之前的检测史、是否被允许选择视频或被分配视频以及观看了哪段视频,他们在自我效能感方面存在高度显著差异。与至少进行过一次检测的参与者相比,表示之前从未进行过检测的参与者在检测前的自我效能感显著较低。在那些之前从未进行过检测的参与者中,随机被允许选择干预视频并选择观看描绘医生的视频的参与者报告的自我效能感在检测前后的提升最大。我们的研究结果不仅强调了干预内容的重要性,还强调了该内容如何传递给特定参与者的重要性。这些发现可能为更有效的基于技术的行为健康干预措施提供参考。