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The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program is an essential platform for reducing health disparities among people with HIV and scaling up evidence-based strategies to strengthen the HIV care continuum. The investigators propose an implementation-science study based in New York Ryan White Part A programs, to inform the delivery of long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy and related supportive services to low-income, largely Black and Latino/a people with HIV who have struggled with daily oral antiretroviral therapy adherence. As a major biomedical advance de-necessitating adherence to daily dosing, long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy could greatly increase opportunities for health, survival and transmission prevention, particularly in populations confronting complex barriers to viral load suppression. However, optimizing the public health impact of long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy will require implementation science to assess perceptions and preferences around long-acting injectable versus daily oral regimens, identify support services and delivery mechanisms suited to promoting long-acting injectable uptake and engagement, and address the role of provider beliefs as to which patients should be offered long-acting injectable options. In the absence of this groundwork, long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy may primarily reach those who are already relatively advantaged, and even exacerbate HIV disparities.
Full description
The proposed project aims to develop, select and pilot strategies to promote long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy uptake, adherence and impact in real-world care settings. Timely formative work on patient and provider perceptions and preferences will be essential to a successful, equitable roll-out of long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy. The proposed study will yield valuable insights into barriers and facilitators of long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy engagement in Ryan White Part A medical case management programs designed for people with HIV with documented adherence barriers. Specifically, Aim 3 pilot testing will further inform long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy delivery and scale-up, by measuring implementation outcomes of strategies emerging from earlier Aims of the proposed project. The approach of introducing long-acting injectable options through a patient decision aid has been selected for the pilot. During the pilot, the investigators plan to test two different versions (and three components) of the patient decision aid process, with three of the six partnering service sites testing each version. These will be tested simultaneously during the 9-month pilot, expected to begin in early May 2023. Through a partnership between the Institute for Implementation Science and Population Health at the City University of New York, the New York City Health Department and six Ryan White Part A service provider agencies, products from the proposed project will be translated to local HIV services planning and practice improvements, while being disseminated nationally and internationally.
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N/A, aside from age minimum and language requirements already noted above
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243 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Tigran Avoundjian, PhD; Mary Irvine, DrPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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