Reproductive Health Clinical Trial
Official title:
Using a Theory-based SMS/VM Intervention to Improve Sexual and Reproductive Health of Female Entertainment Workers in Cambodia: Study Protocol of a Randomized Controlled Trial
In Cambodia, HIV is prevalent in several high-risk groups including among female entertainment workers (FEWs) who work at entertainment venues such as karaoke bars and massage parlors and may engage in direct or indirect sex work. Reaching FEWs with sexual and reproductive health services such as testing and treatment for HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and contraception has been difficult because they are hidden and stigmatized. Mobile phone-based interventions may prove to be an effective way to reach this population and connect them with the existing services. This article describes study design and implementation of a two-arm randomized controlled trial of a mobile health intervention (the Mobile Link) aiming to improve sexual and reproductive health outcomes among FEWs in Cambodia. A two-armed randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be used to determine the effectiveness of a mobile phone-based text/voice messaging intervention. The intervention will be developed through a participatory process; 50 FEWs will work alongside researchers in focus groups to modify and tailor behavior change theory-based text and voice messages. Then, 600 FEWs will be recruited and randomly assigned into one of two arms: (1) a control group and (2) a mobile phone message group (either text messages or voice messages, delivery method chosen by participant). The primary outcome measures include HIV testing, condom use, STI testing and treatment and contraceptive use. If the Mobile Link trial is successful, an increase in condom use, screening and treatment for HIV and STI and contraception use is expected. These outcomes would lead to a reduction in the prevalence of HIV, STIs and unintended pregnancies. This trial is unique in a number of ways. First, the option of participation mode is offered to allow participants to choose the message medium that best links them to services. Second, this is the first RCT of a mobile phone-based behavior change intervention using SMS/VMs to support linkage to sexual and reproductive health services in Cambodia. Third, we are working with is a hidden, hard-to-reach and dynamic population with which traditional methods of outreach have not been fully successful.
Introduction
Mobile phones are increasingly being used to enhance the effectiveness of health programs by
engaging individuals in discreet and ongoing ways. Mobile phone health interventions, called
mHealth, can also improve the availability and quality of operational research data. mHealth
interventions have successfully been used in developing countries to collect health data,
increase access to health knowledge and increase medication/appointment adherence. But, few
mHealth interventions have been rigorously evaluated. There is strong evidence that mobile
phone messages can be successfully used to support preventative healthcare, such as maternal
postpartum visit attendance in Kenya. There is also evidence that self-report of risk
behaviors through a mobile phone is a method of data collection that is as reliable and valid
as in-person surveys. Especially for mobile or hidden populations in developing countries,
mobile phones may become our most important tool for linking people to health services.
In Cambodia, several successful mobile phone-based health programs have been introduced in
the areas of post-abortion contraceptive use, pharmacovigilence, diabetes self-management,
case detection/notification and HIV education. The current evidence base for mobile phones
used for health assessment and encouragement of the uptake of services, especially for
hard-to-reach populations that face stigma and discrimination in developing countries is
promising, but stronger impact evaluations are needed to understand the full benefits of such
interventions.
One important hard-to-reach, high-risk group in Cambodia is the growing population of female
entertainment workers (FEWs). FEWs are women working in entertainment venues such as karaoke
bars, massage parlors, restaurants (as hostesses or singers) or beer gardens. FEWs frequently
sell sex, directly or indirectly, to male patrons to supplement their income. By 2013, there
were approximately 40,000 FEWs in Cambodia, 24,000 of whom resided in the capital city of
Phnom Penh. This group has been increasing since the 2008 passage and implementation of the
'Law on Suppression of Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation,' which banned brothel-based
sex work, and more women have moved into indirect sex work based out of entertainment venues.
The influx in the number of FEWs also follows the increase in garment factory jobs that
attract young women from poor rural families to migrate to urban areas to earn and remit
income to their families in their home villages. Today, the garment factories in Cambodia
employ over 700,000 young women. Garment workers are typically not given fair wages, safe
work environments or health insurance—a combination of factors that have resulted in worker
unrests and mass fainting incidents at various factories. Claiming worker rights becomes a
complicated challenge that involves risking their jobs, their livelihood and their ability to
provide for family. As a result, more and more young migrant women become involved in
alternative work opportunities in the entertainment industry. In addition, urban youth may
also be at-risk of engaging in sex work. A recent study from Cambodia found that 48% of
at-risk female youth across the country reported having been paid for sex in the past year.
FEWs in Cambodia are considered at high-risk for poor sexual and reproductive health (SRH)
outcomes because of their involvement in direct or indirect sex work and limited access to
SRH services. Recent studies indicate that HIV prevalence among women working in other
entertainment establishments (9.8%), which is lower than street-based sex workers (37.3%) and
brothel-based sex workers (17.4%), but is still considered a national concern. Recent data on
HIV incidence among FEWs was 9.2% in 2009. In addition, incidences of C. trachomatis, Human
papillomavirus and N. gonorrhea among FEWs are 11.5%, 41.1% and 7.8%, respectively.
Recent surveys on HIV testing rates indicate that 81.7% of FEWs reported ever having had an
HIV test, and 52.3% reported having had an HIV test in the past six months. While there have
been increases in reported condom use in commercial sex work over the past decade, there may
be misreporting of condom use as well as condom failure. Consistent condom use is highly
variable depending on the nature of relationship and several other factors. In 2014, our
study of 667 FEWs showed that, in the past three months, 63.9% were able to find condoms when
needed, and 38.2% used condoms at last sex with non-commercial partners. In another study,
consistent condom use between FEWs and a native client was 98.8%. Consistent condom use among
FEWs and non-commercial partners, such as boyfriends or other romantic relationships, in the
past three months is estimated to be 26.5-34.1%, and has been reported to be as low as 20.6%
among non-paying partners. Moreover, recent studies have shown that 21.4% of FEWs have had
induced abortions since working in entertainment. Sexually transmitted infection (STI)
diagnoses are also common among FEWs.
In Cambodia, government and Non-governmental organization providers currently offer free and
widely available SRH services to FEWs. However, some FEWs experience barriers to using these
services such as discrimination by providers. FEWs report a preference for private providers
as a result. KHANA, the largest national HIV organization in Cambodia, is currently offering
specialized services for FEWs including free distribution of condoms, a 'safe space' drop-in
center, community-based finger-prick HIV and syphilis testing, accompanied referrals to
enrolment of HIV-positive FEWs to pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) and ART services, the
integration of SRH services with HIV services, partner tracing and prevention of mother to
child transmission (PMTCT) programming. Increasing utilization of these services by FEWs is a
high priority.
The Mobile Link intervention is an operational mHealth research project that aims to engage
FEWs, and link them to the existing high quality prevention, care and treatment services in
the country. This intervention will consist of theory-based text, i.e. short message service
(SMS), or voice messages (VM) that aim to increase the utilization of SRH services and reduce
risk behaviors of FEWs in Cambodia. In addition, this intervention will determine if SMS/VM
messaging can be a reliable source of monitoring and evaluation data. The initial operational
research project will focus on FEWs as a proof of concept and if effective, the Mobile Link
intervention program will be tailored for other key populations.
Cellphone use in Cambodia Cambodia is the first country in the world where the number of
mobile phone users has surpassed the number of fixed landlines. The number of mobile
subscribers in Cambodia reached 20 million at the end of 2013, surpassing the country's
population by about 5 million. In a survey of 2,597 youth aged 15-24 drawn from all 24
provinces in Cambodia, 96% declared that they had access to a phone, with 68% reporting that
they owned a personal mobile phone, and 72% had a mobile in their home. There are seven
mobile phone service providers who continue to lower prices causing mobile phone use to
become more affordable and penetration increases. Of the seven cellphone companies, SMART
phone is the leader in overall number of subscribers, and Metphone has the most youth
subscribers (68%).
The percentage of Cambodian people who own at least one smartphone, a cellular phone that
performs many of the functions of a computer, typically having a touchscreen interface,
Internet access, and an operating system capable of running downloaded applications, was
39.5% in 2015, almost doubling the 2013 figure. Controlling for location and gender, 51.3% of
people between the ages of 15 and 65 in 2015 had at least one phone through which it was
possible to send and receive messages in Khmer script (a 65% increase from last year). The
growth in the use of phones that can text Khmer script for women in the last year was 89.8%;
while for men it was only 61.8%. The ability to display Khmer was also found to gradually
increase with the level of education of the owner, from 33% of those who had no formal
education to 69.2% for those who attended or have completed university.
In a recent report from the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), of 2,597 Cambodian
people between the ages of 15-24, 98% reported that they used their mobile phones mostly for
making and receiving calls, 43% for listening to the radio and 32% for sending and receiving
messages, followed relatively closely by playing and downloading games (27%) and taking
photos (22%). Of those youth who used SMS, the majority used English language messages (81%).
In the Asian-Pacific countries, the number of mobile social media users was set to reach one
billion by the fourth quarter of 2015; and in Cambodia increasing 108% from the previous
year. The number of people in the region accessing social media from mobile devices jumped an
impressive 32% in the past year, to reach 900 million. In Cambodia, about 80% of the traffic
is driven by Facebook and YouTube. The proliferation of smartphones has catapulted Facebook
to Cambodia's second-most important source of news this year, surpassing radio and edging
ever closer to overtaking television.
Entertainment workers have both smart and basic mobile phones, use them daily to text and
engage in social media and have expressed interest in receiving health information through
their phones.
Objectives The overall goal of the study is to deploy and rigorously evaluate the efficacy of
Mobile Link, an innovative intervention to engage young FEWs in Cambodia through frequent
SMS/VMs that link them to existing high-quality services including HIV testing. A 12-month
randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted to evaluate the Mobile Link intervention,
with two arms of 300 FEWs each. FEWs will be equally randomized into one of two groups: (1)
no intervention and (2) SMS or VM theory-based behavioral messages.
Specific objectives include: (1) developing the Mobile Link intervention for young FEWs in
Cambodia by conducting participant observation, focus groups and cognitive pilot interviews
to produce a bank of 600 theory-informed SMS/VM messages as well as pilot testing the
feasibility of collecting data from FEWs through SMS and VMs; 2) evaluating the efficacy of
the Mobile Link intervention at the individual and venue level for increasing the uptake of
HIV testing, condom use and the utilization of comprehensive SRH care services among 600
sexually-active FEWs through a 12 month, 2-armed RCT and (3) determining the
cost-effectiveness of the Mobile Link intervention for FEWs as compared the standard
outreach, care and treatment services provided by KHANA.
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