Stonbraker Samantha Brown, Castro Yazmina Espiritusanto, Caraballo Pamela Baez, Mayorga Stefanie, Rael Christine Tagliaferri, Dunn Maria, Centi Sophia, McNair Bryan, Michel Jacob, Goggin-Kehm Molly, Arcia Adriana, Cook Paul
College of Nursing, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Education 2 North, 13120 E 19th Ave, Aurora, CO, 80045 303.724.8281, USA.
Research and Scholarship, Clínica de Familia La Romana, La Romana, Dominican Republic.
AIDS Behav. 2025 Mar;29(3):733-746. doi: 10.1007/s10461-024-04555-0. Epub 2024 Nov 25.
We developed an infographic intervention to augment HIV-related education in the Dominican Republic (DR), which demonstrated preliminary success in pilot studies. We then partnered with the United States Agency for International Development's (USAID) HIV Services and Systems Strengthening program in the DR to scale up the intervention. We used a two-tier Training-of-Trainer (TOT) method to teach intervention administration. N = 12 program leaders completed the tier-1 training and subsequently taught N ~ 102 clinical staff to use infographics with people with HIV (PWH) (tier-2 trainings). Study Aim 1 was to assess implementation outcomes; Aim 2 was to explore infographic influences on program-level health outcomes. We conducted a hybrid type 3 effectiveness-implementation study with three data components: (1) Surveys bookending tier-1 and tier-2 trainings; (2) Focus groups with tier-1 and tier-2 trainees; and (3) program-level data. We designed surveys according to Kirkpatrick's Training Evaluation Model and analyzed responses with descriptive statistics and/or Fisher's exact tests. We led four focus groups with a theory-driven guide and analyzed transcripts with conventional qualitative content analysis. We analyzed program-level data by comparing outcomes before and after infographic use with advanced statistical modeling. All 12 program leaders completed tier-1, and 36 staff completed tier-2 surveys; focus groups comprised eight tier-1 and 27 tier-2 trainees; program-level data pertained to 4,318 PWH. Surveys and focus groups indicated the TOT method is feasible, acceptable, and sustainable. Program-level findings showed PWH were more likely to attend scheduled visits and be virally suppressed following infographic implementation. Results indicate our intervention can likely enhance HIV education at large scale.
我们开发了一种信息图干预措施,以加强多米尼加共和国(DR)的艾滋病相关教育,该措施在试点研究中取得了初步成功。然后,我们与美国国际开发署(USAID)在DR的艾滋病服务与系统强化项目合作,扩大该干预措施的规模。我们采用了两级培训师培训(TOT)方法来教授干预措施的管理。N = 12名项目负责人完成了一级培训,随后培训了约N = 102名临床工作人员,以便与艾滋病病毒感染者(PWH)一起使用信息图(二级培训)。研究目标1是评估实施结果;目标2是探讨信息图对项目层面健康结果的影响。我们进行了一项混合类型3有效性-实施研究,包含三个数据组成部分:(1)在一级和二级培训前后进行的调查;(2)与一级和二级学员进行的焦点小组讨论;(3)项目层面的数据。我们根据柯克帕特里克培训评估模型设计了调查,并使用描述性统计和/或费舍尔精确检验分析了回复。我们在理论驱动的指导下组织了四个焦点小组,并使用传统定性内容分析法分析了文字记录。我们通过使用先进的统计模型比较信息图使用前后的结果来分析项目层面的数据。所有12名项目负责人完成了一级培训,36名工作人员完成了二级调查;焦点小组由8名一级学员和27名二级学员组成;项目层面的数据涉及4318名PWH。调查和焦点小组表明,TOT方法是可行的、可接受的且可持续的。项目层面的研究结果显示,在实施信息图后,PWH更有可能参加预定的就诊并实现病毒抑制。结果表明,我们的干预措施可能会在大规模上加强艾滋病教育。