Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences.
Department of Public Health Sciences.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2022 Jun;90(6):459-477. doi: 10.1037/ccp0000724. Epub 2022 Apr 28.
Effective Skills to Empower Effective Men (ESTEEM) represents the first intervention to address the psychological pathways through which minority stress undermines young sexual minority men's (SMM's) mental and sexual health using transdiagnostic cognitive-behavioral therapy. This study compared the efficacy of ESTEEM against two existing interventions.
Participants were young HIV-negative SMM ( = 254; ages = 18-35; 67.2% racial/ethnic minority) experiencing a depression, anxiety, and/or stress-/trauma-related disorder and past-90-day HIV transmission risk behavior. After completing HIV testing and counseling, participants were randomized to receive 10-session ESTEEM ( = 100); 10-session community-based LGBQ-affirmative counseling ( = 102); or only HIV testing and counseling ( = 52).
For the primary outcome of any HIV transmission risk behavior at 8 months, ESTEEM was not significantly associated with greater reduction compared to HIV testing and counseling (risk ratio [RR] = 0.89, = .52). Supportive analyses of the of HIV transmission risk behavior at 8 months showed a nonsignificant difference between ESTEEM compared to HIV testing and counseling (RR = 0.69) and LGBQ-affirmative counseling (RR = 0.62). For secondary outcomes (e.g., depression, anxiety, substance use, suicidality, number of mental health diagnoses) at 8 months, ESTEEM had a larger effect size than the two comparison conditions, but these comparisons did not reach statistical significance when adjusting for the false discovery rate. Observed effect sizes for condition comparisons were smaller than the effect sizes used to power the study. In exploratory analyses, ESTEEM showed promise for reducing comorbidity.
Because the control conditions were associated with stronger effects than anticipated, and given the heterogeneous nature of transdiagnostic outcomes, the study possessed insufficient power to statistically detect the consistently small-to-moderate benefit of ESTEEM compared to the two control conditions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
有效增强男性效能的技能(ESTEEM)是第一个干预措施,旨在通过使用跨诊断认知行为疗法来解决少数群体压力破坏年轻的性少数男性(SMM)的心理健康和性行为健康的心理途径。本研究比较了 ESTEEM 与两种现有干预措施的疗效。
参与者为年轻的 HIV 阴性 SMM(= 254;年龄 18-35 岁;67.2%为少数民族/族裔),他们患有抑郁、焦虑和/或压力/创伤相关障碍以及过去 90 天的 HIV 传播风险行为。在完成 HIV 检测和咨询后,参与者被随机分配接受 10 节 ESTEEM(= 100);10 节基于社区的 LGBTQ 肯定性咨询(= 102);或仅接受 HIV 检测和咨询(= 52)。
对于 8 个月时任何 HIV 传播风险行为的主要结果,ESTEEM 与 HIV 检测和咨询相比,减少风险的效果不显著(风险比 [RR] = 0.89,=.52)。对 8 个月时 HIV 传播风险行为的分析表明,ESTEEM 与 HIV 检测和咨询(RR = 0.69)和 LGBTQ 肯定性咨询(RR = 0.62)相比,差异不显著。对于次要结果(例如,抑郁、焦虑、物质使用、自杀意念、心理健康诊断数量),8 个月时 ESTEEM 的效应量大于两个对照条件,但在调整假发现率后,这些比较没有达到统计学意义。条件比较的观察到的效应量小于用于为研究提供动力的效应量。在探索性分析中,ESTEEM 显示出减少合并症的潜力。
由于对照条件的效果比预期的要强,并且鉴于跨诊断结果的异质性,该研究的统计能力不足以检测 ESTEEM 与两种对照条件相比的持续小到中等幅度的益处。