PRIME Center for Health Equity, Psychiatry Research Institute at Montefiore Einstein, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, NY, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2024 Dec;28(12):4079-4093. doi: 10.1007/s10461-024-04468-y. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
Older women with HIV face challenges to their quality of life, including neurocognitive decline, early-onset menopause, and chronic health issues. Chief among these concerns is depression, the most common psychiatric comorbidity among people living with HIV, with rates twice as high among women as men. However, tailored interventions among older women living with HIV and depression are lacking. Following the ADAPT-ITT framework to adapt existing interventions for cultural relevance among groups of people living with HIV, the study team revised an evidence-based intervention, the 'Stress Management and Relaxation Training/Expressive Supportive Therapy Women's Project (SMART/EST),' for online implementation. Working with two community stakeholders, the study team conducted focus groups, theater testing, and manual adaptation. This resulted in the development of e-SMART/EST, an online teletherapy group co-facilitated by a Licensed Psychologist and a credentialed Peer Counselor. The adapted, eight-session weekly intervention was tested with an exploratory pilot sample of eight older women (55 years and older) with HIV and depression. Participants rated the acceptability, feasibility, and appropriateness of the intervention, as well as symptoms of depression and HIV-related quality of life before and after the group. The e-SMART/EST Women's Project demonstrated high acceptability, feasibility, and appropriateness. Engagement was high, as women attended an average of 6.8 sessions. In qualitative interviews, participants reported peer co-facilitation, culturally relevant themes (e.g., HIV-related minority stress, critical consciousness, grief, and sex and pleasure), mindfulness techniques, and cohesion with other women as main favorable elements of the intervention. Barriers to online implementation included technological issues, distractions due to remote participation, and hindered emotional attunement compared with in-person group therapy. Findings support further research to test similar interventions in full-scale trials with older women living with depression and HIV.
老年 HIV 感染者面临着生活质量方面的挑战,包括认知能力下降、早发性绝经和慢性健康问题。其中最主要的问题是抑郁,这是 HIV 感染者中最常见的精神共病,女性的发病率是男性的两倍。然而,针对老年 HIV 感染者和抑郁患者的针对性干预措施却很缺乏。研究团队遵循 ADAPT-ITT 框架,使现有干预措施适应 HIV 感染者群体的文化相关性,对一项基于证据的干预措施——“压力管理和放松训练/表达支持性治疗妇女项目(SMART/EST)”进行了修订,以实现在线实施。研究团队与两位社区利益相关者合作,开展了焦点小组、戏剧测试和手册改编。这最终开发出了电子 SMART/EST,这是一种在线远程治疗小组,由一位持照心理学家和一位经过认证的同伴顾问共同主持。改编后的每周八节的干预措施在一个由八名患有 HIV 和抑郁症的老年女性(55 岁及以上)组成的探索性试点样本中进行了测试。参与者评估了干预措施的可接受性、可行性和适当性,以及在小组治疗前后抑郁症状和 HIV 相关生活质量的变化。电子 SMART/EST 妇女项目表现出很高的可接受性、可行性和适当性。参与度很高,因为女性平均参加了 6.8 次小组治疗。在定性访谈中,参与者报告了同伴共同主持、与文化相关的主题(例如,与 HIV 相关的少数族裔压力、批判性意识、悲伤、性和快乐)、正念技术以及与其他女性的凝聚力是干预措施的主要有利因素。在线实施的障碍包括技术问题、远程参与时的分心以及与面对面小组治疗相比情感共鸣受到阻碍。研究结果支持进一步研究,在有抑郁和 HIV 的老年女性中进行更大规模试验,以测试类似的干预措施。