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一项电子健康干预措施在减少种族化性少数和性别少数成年人的心理困扰、增加新冠病毒知识及防护行为方面的效果:一项准实验研究(#安全之手安全之心)

Effectiveness of an eHealth intervention for reducing psychological distress and increasing COVID-19 knowledge and protective behaviors among racialized sexual and gender minority adults: A quasi-experimental study (#SafeHandsSafeHearts).

作者信息

Newman Peter A, Chakrapani Venkatesan, Massaquoi Notisha, Williams Charmaine C, Tharao Wangari, Tepjan Suchon, Roungprakhon Surachet, Forbes Joelleann, Sebastian Sarah, Akkakanjanasupar Pakorn, Aden Muna

机构信息

Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Centre for Sexuality and Health Research and Policy, Chennai, India.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2024 May 3;19(5):e0280710. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0280710. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Sexual and gender minority and racialized populations experienced heightened vulnerability during the Covid-19 pandemic. Marginalization due to structural homophobia, transphobia and racism, and resulting adverse social determinants of health that contribute to health disparities among these populations, were exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic and public health measures to control it. We developed and tested a tailored online intervention (#SafeHandsSafeHearts) to support racialized lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other persons outside of heteronormative and cisgender identities (LGBTQ+) in Toronto, Canada during the pandemic.

METHODS

We used a quasi-experimental pre-test post-test design to evaluate the effectiveness of a 3-session, peer-delivered eHealth intervention in reducing psychological distress and increasing Covid-19 knowledge and protective behaviors. Individuals ≥18-years-old, resident in Toronto, and self-identified as sexual or gender minority were recruited online. Depressive and anxiety symptoms, and Covid-19 knowledge and protective behaviors were assessed at baseline, 2-weeks postintervention, and 2-months follow-up. We used generalized estimating equations and zero-truncated Poisson models to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention on the four primary outcomes.

RESULTS

From March to November 2021, 202 participants (median age, 27 years [Interquartile range: 23-32]) were enrolled in #SafeHandsSafeHearts. Over half (54.5%, n = 110) identified as cisgender lesbian or bisexual women or women who have sex with women, 26.2% (n = 53) cisgender gay or bisexual men or men who have sex with men, and 19.3% (n = 39) transgender or nonbinary individuals. The majority (75.7%, n = 143) were Black and other racialized individuals. The intervention led to statistically significant reductions in the prevalence of clinically significant depressive (25.4% reduction, p < .01) and anxiety symptoms (16.6% reduction, p < .05), and increases in Covid-19 protective behaviors (4.9% increase, p < .05), from baseline to postintervention.

CONCLUSION

We demonstrated the effectiveness of a brief, peer-delivered eHealth intervention for racialized LGBTQ+ communities in reducing psychological distress and increasing protective behaviors amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Implementation through community-based organizations by trained peer counselors supports feasibility, acceptability, and the importance of engaging racialized LGBTQ+ communities in pandemic response preparedness. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT04870723.

摘要

目的

性少数群体、性别少数群体和种族化群体在新冠疫情期间面临更高的脆弱性。由于结构性恐同、恐跨和种族主义导致的边缘化,以及由此产生的不利于健康的社会决定因素,这些因素加剧了这些群体之间的健康差距,而新冠疫情及其防控公共卫生措施则使这种情况进一步恶化。我们开发并测试了一种量身定制的在线干预措施(#安全之手安全之心),以在疫情期间支持加拿大多伦多的种族化女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿及其他非异性恋和顺性别身份的人群(LGBTQ+)。

方法

我们采用准实验前后测设计,评估一项由同伴提供的、为期三节的电子健康干预措施在减轻心理困扰、增加新冠知识和防护行为方面的有效性。在线招募年龄≥18岁、居住在多伦多且自我认定为性少数或性别少数的个体。在基线、干预后2周和2个月随访时评估抑郁和焦虑症状、新冠知识及防护行为。我们使用广义估计方程和零截断泊松模型来评估干预对四个主要结局的有效性。

结果

2021年3月至11月,202名参与者(中位年龄27岁[四分位间距:23 - 32岁])参与了#安全之手安全之心项目。超过一半(54.5%,n = 110)被认定为顺性别女同性恋或双性恋女性或与女性发生性行为的女性,26.2%(n = 53)为顺性别男同性恋或双性恋男性或与男性发生性行为的男性,19.3%(n = 39)为跨性别或非二元性别个体。大多数(75.7%,n = 143)是黑人和其他种族化个体。从基线到干预后,该干预导致具有临床意义的抑郁患病率(降低25.4%,p < .01)和焦虑症状(降低16.6%,p < .05)在统计学上显著降低,以及新冠防护行为增加(增加4.9%,p < .05)。

结论

我们证明了一项简短的、由同伴提供的电子健康干预措施对种族化LGBTQ+社区在新冠疫情期间减轻心理困扰和增加防护行为方面的有效性。通过社区组织由经过培训的同伴咨询师实施该干预措施,支持了其可行性、可接受性,以及让种族化LGBTQ+社区参与疫情应对准备工作的重要性。本试验已在ClinicalTrials.gov注册,注册号为NCT04870723。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cf39/11068205/755254437730/pone.0280710.g001.jpg

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