Frye Victoria, Paige Mark Q, Gordon Steven, Matthews David, Musgrave Geneva, Greene Emily, Kornegay Mark, Farhat Davida, Smith Philip H, Usher DaShawn, Phelan Jo C, Koblin Beryl A, Taylor-Akutagawa Vaughn
Department of Community Health and Social Medicine, City University of New York School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Laboratory of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Lindsley F. Kimball Research Institute, New York Blood Center, New York, NY, USA.
Stigma Health. 2019 Feb;4(1):72-81. doi: 10.1037/sah0000109. Epub 2017 Nov 2.
HIV stigma and homophobia are barriers to access to HIV prevention and treatment services. Project CHHANGE, Challenge HIV Stigma and Homophobia and Gain Empowerment, was a multicomponent intervention designed to reduce community-level HIV stigma and homophobia via workshops, space-based events and bus shelter ads delivered to community-based organizations and neighborhood residents in a high HIV prevalence, primarily African-American, Black and/or Afro-Caribbean, neighborhood in New York City (NYC).
Serial cross-sectional, street intercept surveys among residents of the invention neighborhood and matched control neighborhood were conducted before and after the intervention. Propensity score matching and generalized estimating equation regression models assessed the impact of CHHANGE on HIV stigma and homophobia. HIV testing service utilization data were assessed and multivariable models of self-reported HIV testing among post-intervention street survey respondents were built.
We did not find a significant treatment effect on HIV stigma and homophobia among residents of the intervention neighborhood as compared with control community residents. However, HIV testing increased by 350% at the testing site in the intervention community after the intervention implementation. Further, lower HIV stigma, attending an HIV stigma workshop and having friends or family living with HIV were independently associated with past six-month HIV testing among post-intervention respondents in both neighborhoods.
CHHANGE was feasible and acceptable to community residents. Evaluating community-level interventions is challenging. Our triangulated approach yielded somewhat conflicting results, which may be due to design limitations. Further research is needed to understand whether and how CHHANGE affected HIV testing.
对艾滋病病毒的污名化和恐同心理是获得艾滋病病毒预防和治疗服务的障碍。“改变”项目(挑战艾滋病病毒污名化和恐同心理并增强权能)是一项多方面的干预措施,旨在通过举办工作坊、开展实地活动以及在公交候车亭投放广告,向纽约市(NYC)一个艾滋病病毒高流行率社区(主要为非裔美国人、黑人及/或非裔加勒比人社区)的社区组织和邻里居民宣传,以减少社区层面的艾滋病病毒污名化和恐同心理。
在干预前后,对干预社区和匹配的对照社区的居民进行了系列横断面街头拦截调查。倾向得分匹配和广义估计方程回归模型评估了“改变”项目对艾滋病病毒污名化和恐同心理的影响。评估了艾滋病病毒检测服务的利用数据,并建立了干预后街头调查受访者自我报告艾滋病病毒检测情况的多变量模型。
与对照社区居民相比,我们未发现干预社区居民在艾滋病病毒污名化和恐同心理方面有显著的治疗效果。然而,在干预实施后,干预社区检测点的艾滋病病毒检测量增加了350%。此外,在两个社区干预后的受访者中,较低的艾滋病病毒污名化程度、参加艾滋病病毒污名化工作坊以及有感染艾滋病病毒的朋友或家人与过去六个月的艾滋病病毒检测独立相关。
“改变”项目对社区居民来说是可行且可接受的。评估社区层面的干预措施具有挑战性。我们的三角测量法得出了一些相互矛盾的结果,这可能是由于设计上的局限性。需要进一步研究以了解“改变”项目是否以及如何影响艾滋病病毒检测。