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The study goal is to promote viral load suppression among women with serious mental illness (SMI) and HIV in Botswana, given that these women are especially vulnerable to psychiatric medication nonadherence and symptom exacerbation, which are made worse by stigma and threaten antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence.
The investigators propose to test an intervention to reduce stigma due to the statuses of SMI and HIV, against an attention control condition, in the high-risk transition period after discharge from an initial psychiatric hospitalization. Specifically, the investigators are conducting a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a 4-month follow-up to compare the effectiveness of 1) What Matters Most (WMM)-based intersectional stigma intervention delivered as clients transition from psychiatric hospitalization to outpatient care; and 2) an attention placebo control condition that follows a similar format to isolate the effects of the intervention.
The investigators will also assess policymaker workshops where peer women with SMI and HIV co-lead the reporting of RCT findings via lived experience to policymakers to initiate structural change.
Enabling women with SMI and HIV to resist stigma has the potential to improve their HIV outcomes and empower these women to elicit broader, structural-level change.
Full description
The proposed project, "RCT of an intersectional stigma intervention to sustain viral suppression among women living with serious mental illness and HIV in Botswana," will test a culturally tailored stigma intervention among women with co-occurring serious mental illness (SMI) and HIV receiving inpatient treatment at Sbrana Psychiatric Hospital in Lobatse, Botswana, who are then discharged into outpatient care. The culturally tailored stigma intervention is based on our novel 'what matters most' (WMM) approach to target intersectional stigma. The investigators will also be conducting a family-level stigma intervention to test its efficacy at reducing family-level SMI and HIV stigma, and to test family-level stigma as a mechanism for change in VL among women. Lastly, the investigators will pilot a policymaker workshop intended to facilitate structural-level change.
Populations included in the study:
RESEARCH AIM 2.
The investigators propose a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a 4-month follow-up to compare the effectiveness of our WMM-based stigma intervention to reduce viral load (VL) at 4-month follow-up (primary outcome) and improve the secondary outcomes of antiretroviral treatment (ART) and psychiatric treatment adherence, MH outcomes (e.g., depression), and social outcomes (e.g., social integration).
In Botswana, families are usually contacted and engaged in psychiatric treatment planning during inpatient stay or on admission. The involvement of family continues during outpatient follow-ups since most patients are accompanied by some relative or caregiver on such visits. Because family acceptance can bolster achieving the capabilities of 'good womanhood' (i.e., by being a family caregiver), family members will receive a parallel, group stigma intervention, which could further facilitate treatment adherence of the recently discharged family member. Therefore, the investigators will conduct a parallel two-arm intervention among women's family members to test its effectiveness in reducing family-level stigma and to assess family-level stigma as a mechanism of change for primary and secondary outcomes among women with SMI and HIV (e.g., VL, ART and psychiatric treatment adherence, MH outcomes and Social outcomes).
Participants in Research Aim 2 will be 75% female identified (100% of inpatient participants will be female-identified, and the investigators are accounting for a 50-50 gender split among recruited family members). Estimated distribution is 270 women, 90 men.
RESEARCH AIM 3.
The investigators further propose to pilot and evaluate policymaker workshops whereby peer women with SMI and HIV share RCT findings via lived experience to policymakers to initiate structural-level change.
The investigators anticipate that the multisectoral stakeholder committee members (n=15) and policymakers (n=50) in Research Aim 3 will have ~50-50 gender split - 32 women, 33 men.
OVERVIEW.
UBotswana will recruit participants and conduct the intervention, assessments, and data management. Overseen by PI Yang, NYU will provide study oversight, expertise in WMM and stigma, and conduct data analyses; UPenn will provide expertise in integration of the intervention for SMI and HIV; Botswana-UPenn Partnership will provide expertise in integration of peers into stigma interventions and implementation of community based interventions in Botswana; UCSF and UC Riverside will offer expertise and supervision in stigma interventions.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
(A) WOMEN WITH SMI AND HIV
At Sbrana Psychiatric Hospital, the investigators will recruit women with SMI and HIV who are receiving treatment at that facility. Women with SMI and HIV will be receiving psychiatric care and ART and must:
Meet DSM-5 criteria for current psychotic disorder or mood disorders or other disorders causing functional impairment except substance use disorders and developmental disorders, per clinician interview based on the MINI
Have confirmed HIV positive status
Be 18-55 years of age
Be female
Have capacity to provide consent and written informed consent
Speak English or Setswana
Be a Botswana citizen
The investigators will also recruit 6 to 8 women with SMI and HIV as peer co-leaders to facilitate the intervention. For women who are peer co-leaders, inclusion criteria include #1 to #7 above in addition to:
Remaining adherent to psychiatric medications
Being symptomatically stable for >2 years
Maintaining consistent ART adherence.
(B) FAMILY MEMBERS OF WOMEN WITH SMI AND HIV.
In Botswana, families are usually contacted and engaged in psychiatric treatment planning during inpatient stay or on admission. The involvement of family continues during outpatient follow-ups since most patients are accompanied by some relative or caregiver on such visits. Eligible participants include:
(C) POLICY MAKERS AND OTHER STAKEHOLDERS.
Policy makers will be
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360 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Ari Ho-Foster, MPH; Lawrence Yang, PHD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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