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Effectiveness of HIV/Sexually Transmitted Infection Training for Physicians in China

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Gonorrhea
Chlamydia
HIV Infections

Treatments

Behavioral: Physician Ai Shi Zi training
Drug: Standard care
Behavioral: Patient risk-reduction counseling

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00644150
DAHBR 9A-ASG-P
R01MH075639 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will evaluate the effectiveness of a physician training program, the Ai Shi Zi program, in improving HIV/sexually transmitted infection diagnosis, treatment, and management by Chinese physicians and in reducing the number of subsequent infections in their patients.

Full description

HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are among the foremost public health concerns worldwide, with the number of infections continuing to rise significantly. Specifically, in China, the number of cases of HIV is estimated to rise from 650,000 in 2006 to more than 10 million by the year 2010. The reasons for the drastic increase may be associated with a lack of education about proper condom use and consequences of sexual risk behaviors and the existing stigma toward HIV/STI patients. Therefore, increased knowledge of HIV/STI prevention and treatment is necessary for both physicians and patients in China. A program that provides training in HIV/STI prevention, treatment, and management to physicians may be an effective means of enhancing their abilities to deliver high quality, integrated HIV/STI prevention and treatment. The Ai Shi Zi program, which provides training on stigma, risk-reduction counseling methods, and treatment skills to county and township level physicians in China, may be an effective means of implementing HIV/STI training. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of the Ai Shi Zi program in improving HIV/STI diagnosis, treatment, and management by Chinese physicians and in reducing the number of subsequent HIV/STI infections in their patients.

Participants in this study will include county level physicians and their patients and township level physicians. All physicians will first undergo baseline assessments that will include questions about knowledge of HIV/STI, capability of administering HIV/STI screening and risk-reduction counseling, and attitudes toward working with HIV/STI-infected individuals. Physicians will then be assigned randomly to receive the Ai Shi Zi program or no training.

Physician training in the Ai Shi Zi program will consist of multiple components: an orientation workshop on fundamental knowledge and skills of HIV/STI treatment and prevention, a 3-month practice period, a 3-month post-practice seminar on preventive counseling, another 3-month practice period, and a 6-month post-practice seminar on clinical HIV and STI management. Physicians will keep weekly journals during both 3-month practice periods, citing the most interesting or difficult STI or HIV case they experienced during the week. The practice periods will promote learning-by-doing to further enhance physicians' abilities to deliver high quality, integrated HIV/STI prevention and treatment. Both post-practice seminars will allow physicians to share experiences gained during the previous 3-month practice period. County level physicians will receive the seminar training from experts in the fields of HIV/STIs, behavioral counseling, and stigma reduction. After completing the first post-practice seminar, the county level physicians then, in turn, will present the training to the township level physicians. All physicians will undergo repeat baseline assessments at post-training; post-practice seminars; and Months 1, 2, and 15 after orientation.

Upon completion of the 6-month post-practice seminar, physicians will begin to implement the Ai Shi Zi program in their clinics. Each patient participant who seeks treatment from physician participants, who have received either Ai Shi Zi training or no training, will first undergo a test for chlamydia and gonorrhea. On this initial visit, the physicians who have received the Ai Shi Zi program will provide HIV/STI risk-behavior counseling to their patients. The counseling will include discussion of topics such as partner notification, HIV/STI prevention, expected difficulties in changing behaviors, and development of a risk-reduction plan. Patient participants will then return within 2 weeks to receive their test results and additional behavioral counseling. If the STI is confirmed by the lab test, patients will be treated with standard care and will be asked to complete an assessment. The assessment will include a 30-minute interview about HIV/STI-related knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, practices, service utilization, and risk behaviors. Nine months after baseline, patient participants will undergo a repeat interview.

Enrollment

1,373 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria for Patient Participants:

  • Tests positive for the presence of gonorrhea or chlamydia
  • Plans on living in current community for at least 9 months after study entry
  • Willing to provide contact information for 9-month follow-up

Inclusion Criteria for County Level Physician Participants:

  • Specializes in STI, obstetrics/gynecology, urology, infectious disease, or HIV care
  • Minimum of 3 years of clinical experience as verified by practice supervisor
  • Sees HIV/STI and related patients in his/her practice
  • Willing to participate for the entire duration of the training, including secondary training stage

Inclusion Criteria for Township Level Physicians Participants:

  • Minimum of 3 years of clinical experience as verified by practice supervisor
  • Works in a high service volume area (among the top one-third within his/her host township health center)
  • Sees HIV/STI and related patients in his/her practice
  • Willing to participate for the entire duration of the training, including secondary training stage

Exclusion Criteria for All Participants:

  • Presence of an obvious psychological/psychiatric disorder that would invalidate the informed consent process or otherwise contraindicate participation in the assessment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,373 participants in 6 patient groups

1
Experimental group
Description:
Physicians of county level will receive Ai Shi Zi training provided by experts in the fields of HIV/STIs, behavioral counseling, and stigma reduction.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physician Ai Shi Zi training
2
Experimental group
Description:
Physicians of township level will receive Ai Shi Zhi training provided by the county level physicians.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physician Ai Shi Zi training
3
Experimental group
Description:
HIV/STI patients will receive standard of care and specialized care from physician participants trained in Ai Shi Zi.
Treatment:
Drug: Standard care
Behavioral: Patient risk-reduction counseling
4
No Intervention group
Description:
Physicians of county level who will not participate in Ai Shi Zi training
5
No Intervention group
Description:
Physicians of township level who will not participate in Ai Shi Zi training
6
Sham Comparator group
Description:
HIV/STI patients who will receive standard care only
Treatment:
Drug: Standard care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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