Downing Martin J, Wiatrek Sarah E, Zahn Ryan J, Mansergh Gordon, Olansky Evelyn, Gelaude Deborah, Sullivan Patrick S, Stephenson Rob, Siegler Aaron J, Bauermeister José, Horvath Keith J, Chiasson Mary Ann, Yoon Irene S, Houang Steven T, Hernandez Anthony Jimenez, Hirshfield Sabina
Department of Psychology, Lehman College, CUNY, Bronx, NY, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Mhealth. 2023 Jan 28;9:2. doi: 10.21037/mhealth-21-53. eCollection 2023.
Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) continue to be overrepresented in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the United States. HIV prevention and care interventions that are tailored to an individual's serostatus have the potential to lower the rate of new infections among GBMSM. Mobile technology is a critical tool for disseminating targeted messaging and increasing uptake of basic prevention services including HIV testing, sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing, and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). Mobile Messaging for Men (M-Cubed) is a mobile health HIV prevention intervention designed to deliver video- and text-based prevention messages, provide STI and HIV information, and link GBMSM to prevention and healthcare resources. The current report describes an iterative process of identifying and selecting publicly available videos to be used as part of the M-Cubed intervention. We also conducted interviews with GBMSM to assess the acceptability, comprehension, and potential audience reach of the selected video messages.
The selection of videos included balancing of specific criteria [e.g., accuracy of scientific information, video length, prevention domains: HIV/STI testing, antiretroviral therapy (ART), PrEP, engagement in care, and condom use] to ensure that they were intended for our GBMSM audiences: HIV-negative men who engage in condomless anal sex, HIV-negative men who do not engage in condomless anal sex, and men living with HIV. This formative study included in-person interviews with 26 GBMSM from three U.S. cities heavily impacted by the HIV epidemic-New York City, Detroit, and Atlanta.
Following a qualitative content analysis, the study team identified five themes across the interviews: participant reactions to the video messages, message comprehension, PrEP concerns, targeting of video messaging, and prompted action.
Study results informed a final selection of 12 video messages for inclusion in a randomized controlled trial of M-Cubed. Findings may serve as a guide for researchers who plan to develop HIV prevention interventions that utilize publicly available videos to promote behavioral change. Further, the findings presented here suggest the importance of developing videos with broad age and gender diversity for use in interventions such as M-Cubed, and in other health promotion settings.
在美国,男同性恋者、双性恋者以及其他与男性发生性关系的男性(GBMSM)在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染人群中所占比例仍然过高。针对个人血清学状态量身定制的HIV预防和护理干预措施,有可能降低GBMSM中的新感染率。移动技术是传播针对性信息以及提高包括HIV检测、性传播感染(STI)检测和暴露前预防(PrEP)在内的基本预防服务使用率的关键工具。男性移动信息服务(M-Cubed)是一项移动健康HIV预防干预措施,旨在提供基于视频和文本的预防信息,提供STI和HIV信息,并将GBMSM与预防和医疗资源联系起来。本报告描述了一个识别和选择公开可用视频以作为M-Cubed干预措施一部分的迭代过程。我们还对GBMSM进行了访谈,以评估所选视频信息的可接受性、理解程度以及潜在受众范围。
视频的选择包括平衡特定标准[例如,科学信息的准确性、视频长度、预防领域:HIV/STI检测、抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)、PrEP、接受护理情况以及使用避孕套情况],以确保这些视频是针对我们的GBMSM受众群体的:进行无保护肛交的HIV阴性男性、不进行无保护肛交的HIV阴性男性以及HIV感染者。这项形成性研究包括对来自美国受HIV疫情严重影响的三个城市——纽约市、底特律和亚特兰大的26名GBMSM进行面对面访谈。
经过定性内容分析,研究团队在访谈中确定了五个主题:参与者对视频信息的反应、信息理解、对PrEP的担忧、视频信息的针对性以及引发的行动。
研究结果为最终选择12条视频信息以纳入M-Cubed的随机对照试验提供了依据。研究结果可为计划开发利用公开可用视频来促进行为改变的HIV预防干预措施的研究人员提供指导。此外,此处呈现的研究结果表明,制作具有广泛年龄和性别多样性的视频对于用于M-Cubed等干预措施以及其他健康促进环境的重要性。