Mackesy-Amiti Mary Ellen, Levy Judith A, Luc Casey M, Jonbekov Jonbek
School of Public Health, University of Illinois Chicago, 1603 W. Taylor St., Chicago, Illinois, 60612, USA.
PRISMA Research Center, Dushanbe, Tajikistan.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jun 10;25(1):2154. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-23387-8.
Male Tajik labour migrants who inject drugs in Russia are at high risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. The "Migrants' Approached Self-Learning Intervention in HIV/AIDS for Tajiks" (MASLIHAT) trained Tajik labour migrants who inject drugs in Moscow as peer educators (PEs) in delivering HIV prevention information and promoting risk-reduction norms and practices within their diaspora social networks while reducing their own HIV risk. Our earlier analysis of a cluster-randomized controlled trial testing the intervention's effects found that MASLIHAT reduced condomless sex, condomless sex with female sex workers, and sex with multiple sexual partners. This analysis draws on data from this parent study to investigate if these observed changes in safer sex translated into fewer reported STIs over 12 months.
Male Tajik migrant workers in Moscow who inject drugs (n = 140) were recruited from construction worksites, local bazaars, and diaspora organizations serving labor migrants. Participants were assigned as PEs to either MASLIHAT or a comparison health education intervention. Each PE recruited two migrants who inject drugs from their social networks with whom to share what they learned during the 5 educational sessions of the arm to which they were assigned. All participants completed questionnaires at baseline and 3-month intervals for one year to assess their HIV/STI risk behaviour. Mixed effects robust Poisson regression analyses tested for possible differences between assignment conditions in self-reported STIs during 12 months of follow-up and the contribution of sexual risk behaviours to STI acquisition. We then tested the mediating effects of sexual behaviours during the first six months following the intervention on STIs reported at the 9 and 12-month follow-up.
Participants in the MASLIHAT intervention were significantly less likely to report an STI during follow-up (IRR = 0.27). Condomless sex with a casual or commercial partner was significantly associated with STI acquisition (IRR = 2.30). Causal mediation analysis indicated that the intervention's effect on reported STI was partially mediated by reductions among MASLIHAT participants in condomless sex with a casual or commercial partner.
The MASLIHAT peer-education intervention reduced reported STIs among Tajik labour migrants partly through reduced condomless sex with casual and commercial partners.
ClinicalTrials.gov, 2021-04-16, NCT04853394.
在俄罗斯注射毒品的塔吉克男性劳务移民感染艾滋病毒和其他性传播感染的风险很高。“塔吉克人艾滋病毒/艾滋病移民自主学习干预措施”(MASLIHAT)培训了在莫斯科注射毒品的塔吉克劳务移民,让他们成为同伴教育者,在其侨民社交网络中传播艾滋病毒预防信息,推广降低风险的规范和做法,同时降低自身感染艾滋病毒的风险。我们早期对一项测试该干预措施效果的整群随机对照试验的分析发现,MASLIHAT减少了无保护性行为、与女性性工作者的无保护性行为以及与多个性伴侣发生性行为的情况。本分析利用这项母研究的数据,调查这些在安全性行为方面观察到的变化在12个月内是否转化为报告的性传播感染病例减少。
从建筑工地、当地集市以及为劳务移民服务的侨民组织中招募了在莫斯科注射毒品的塔吉克男性务工人员(n = 140)。参与者被分配为同伴教育者,接受MASLIHAT或对照健康教育干预措施。每位同伴教育者从其社交网络中招募两名注射毒品的移民,与他们分享在分配给他们的干预组的5次教育课程中学到的内容。所有参与者在基线时以及之后一年每3个月完成一次问卷调查,以评估他们的艾滋病毒/性传播感染风险行为。混合效应稳健泊松回归分析测试了在12个月的随访期间,不同分配条件下自我报告的性传播感染情况之间可能存在的差异,以及性风险行为对性传播感染感染的影响。然后,我们测试了干预后前六个月的性行为对9个月和12个月随访时报告的性传播感染情况的中介作用。
接受MASLIHAT干预的参与者在随访期间报告性传播感染的可能性显著降低(发病率比 = 0.27)。与临时或商业性伴侣的无保护性行为与性传播感染显著相关(发病率比 = 2.30)。因果中介分析表明,干预措施对报告的性传播感染的影响部分是由MASLIHAT参与者与临时或商业性伴侣的无保护性行为减少所介导的。
MASLIHAT同伴教育干预措施部分通过减少与临时和商业性伴侣的无保护性行为,降低了塔吉克劳务移民报告的性传播感染病例。
ClinicalTrials.gov,2021年4月16日,NCT04853394。