Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States.
Department of Population Health, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2023 Aug;26(8):e26142. doi: 10.1002/jia2.26142.
While it is widely acknowledged that family relationships can influence health outcomes, their impact on the uptake of individual health interventions is unclear. In this study, we quantified how the efficacy of a randomized health intervention is shaped by its pattern of distribution in the family network.
The "Home-Based Intervention to Test and Start" (HITS) was a 2×2 factorial community-randomized controlled trial in Umkhanyakude, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, embedded in the Africa Health Research Institute's population-based demographic and HIV surveillance platform (ClinicalTrials.gov # NCT03757104). The study investigated the impact of two interventions: a financial micro-incentive and a male-targeted HIV-specific decision support programme. The surveillance area was divided into 45 community clusters. Individuals aged ≥15 years in 16 randomly selected communities were offered a micro-incentive (R50 [$3] food voucher) for rapid HIV testing (intervention arm). Those living in the remaining 29 communities were offered testing only (control arm). Study data were collected between February and November 2018. Using routinely collected data on parents, conjugal partners, and co-residents, a socio-centric family network was constructed among HITS-eligible individuals. Nodes in this network represent individuals and ties represent family relationships. We estimated the effect of offering the incentive to people with and without family members who also received the offer on the uptake of HIV testing. We fitted a linear probability model with robust standard errors, accounting for clustering at the community level.
Overall, 15,675 people participated in the HITS trial. Among those with no family members who received the offer, the incentive's efficacy was a 6.5 percentage point increase (95% CI: 5.3-7.7). The efficacy was higher among those with at least one family member who received the offer (21.1 percentage point increase (95% CI: 19.9-22.3). The difference in efficacy was statistically significant (21.1-6.5 = 14.6%; 95% CI: 9.3-19.9).
Micro-incentives appear to have synergistic effects when distributed within family networks. These effects support family network-based approaches for the design of health interventions.
尽管人们普遍认为家庭关系会影响健康结果,但它们对个体健康干预措施的采用的影响尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们量化了随机健康干预措施的效果如何受到其在家庭网络中的分布模式的影响。
“家庭为基础的测试和启动干预”(HITS)是在南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省乌姆哈尼亚库德进行的一项 2×2 析因社区随机对照试验,嵌入非洲健康研究所基于人群的人口和艾滋病毒监测平台(ClinicalTrials.gov # NCT03757104)。该研究调查了两种干预措施的影响:财务小额激励和针对男性的艾滋病毒特定决策支持计划。监测区域分为 45 个社区集群。在 16 个随机选定的社区中,年龄≥15 岁的个人被提供快速艾滋病毒检测的小额激励(干预组)(R50 [3 美元] 食品券)。其余 29 个社区的居民仅提供检测(对照组)。研究数据于 2018 年 2 月至 11 月收集。利用常规收集的关于父母、配偶和共同居住者的数据,在 HITS 合格者中构建了一个以社会为中心的家庭网络。该网络中的节点代表个人,关系代表家庭关系。我们估计了向没有也没有收到邀请的家庭成员提供激励措施对艾滋病毒检测采用的影响。我们拟合了一个具有稳健标准误差的线性概率模型,考虑了社区层面的聚类。
总体而言,共有 15675 人参加了 HITS 试验。在没有收到邀请的家庭成员中,激励措施的效果是增加了 6.5 个百分点(95%CI:5.3-7.7)。在至少有一名收到邀请的家庭成员的人中,效果更高(增加了 21.1 个百分点(95%CI:19.9-22.3)。效果差异具有统计学意义(21.1-6.5=14.6%;95%CI:9.3-19.9)。
当在家庭网络中分配时,小额激励似乎具有协同效应。这些影响支持基于家庭网络的健康干预措施设计。