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Using Implementation Science to Increase Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake Among African American Women

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health logo

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Status

Completed

Conditions

Domestic Violence
HIV Infections

Treatments

Behavioral: Trauma-Informed Toolkit

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05139069
IRB00012361 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pre-exposure prophylaxis may be a viable option for African American women at-risk for HIV infection, but few studies have identified optimal strategies to reach African American women in need of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis nor examined effective strategies to scale-up Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis among African American women in the South. African American women in the South experience high rates of intimate partner violence which could force women to choose between HIV prevention or intimate partner violence prevention. The proposed research study seeks to develop, pilot-test, and evaluate a Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Implementation Toolkit within two community healthcare clinics located in Jackson, Mississippi to increase Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis uptake among African American, address intimate partner violence as a barrier to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis uptake, and ultimately combat racial disparities in women's HIV diagnoses.

Full description

HIV and intimate partner violence are intersecting, mutually-reinforcing epidemics that significantly affect African American women, particularly women in the U.S. South. African American women face some of the highest rates of both HIV and intimate partner violence among U.S. women, and these burdens are most pronounced in the South. African American surviving intimate partner violence may experience forced, condom less sex, which increases the risk of HIV acquisition. Pre-exposure prophylaxis has the potential to be the most innovative HIV prevention strategy, however it remains underutilized by African American women and residents of the South. In order to reduce African American women's HIV acquisition risk in the South, effective HIV prevention interventions need to concurrently address relationship safety and HIV acquisition risks. Developing effective interventions to tackle this HIV-related disparity among African American women is essential to reach national HIV goals.Therefore, the proposed research aims to develop, test, and evaluate a Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Implementation Toolkit for clinical staff in community healthcare settings in the South. The Toolkit will be evaluated using the Reach, Effectiveness-Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance (RE-AIM). The Toolkit will serve the dual purpose of increasing Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis uptake among African American women in the South while addressing intimate partner violence as a potential Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis barrier. This research project will include a formative evaluation (i.e., reach stage), including key informant interviews with clinical staff at the partnering community healthcare clinics (N=10), and six focus groups with African American women at risk for HIV acquisition (i.e., Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis-eligible; %50 intimate partner violence-exposed). The qualitative data from the formal evaluation will inform the development of the Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Implementation Toolkit, including detailed curriculum and supporting materials. The Toolkit will be pilot tested in two community healthcare clinics using a nonrandomized waitlist control design employed at the clinic-level. Clinic 1 will receive the Toolkit; and after the 8-month data is collected, Clinic 2 will receive the Toolkit. Changes in Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis uptake and retention in care will be assessed at the clinic level from 8-months before and after the Toolkit is implemented (i.e., effectiveness stage). To examine these effects at the clinic-level, a series of interrupted time series analyses will be conducted. This approach allows us to analyze population changes as opposed to individual change. To yield a moderate effect size with a power=.80 and alpha =.05, a sample size of at least 8 timepoints are needed. Following the Toolkit's implementation, four focus groups with clinical staff will be conducted to assess barriers and facilitators (i.e., adoption stage). Lastly, key informant interviews with clinical staff (N=20) will be conducted to assess fidelity of the Toolkit's components.

Enrollment

27 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

- currently providing care at a community healthcare clinic in Mississippi

Exclusion criteria

  • non-English speaking
  • inability to read and comprehend questions

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

27 participants in 1 patient group

Trauma-Informed Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Implementation Toolkit
Experimental group
Description:
The Toolkit to be developed in the proposed study includes components from the women-specific Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis care continuum theoretical model and implementation challenges, and is adapted to identify and provide care to women experiencing intimate partner violence. Overall, the Toolkit is designed to create culturally-congruent, intimate partner violence-informed clinical settings; and equip clinical staff with the knowledge and skills they need to address HIV prevention for African American women; and integrate intimate partner violence into Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis care services.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Trauma-Informed Toolkit

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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