HIV/AIDS Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development and Pilot of Positive Self-Reappraisal Emotion Regulation Intervention to Improve Self-Care Among HIV+ Substance Users
Innovative approaches are needed to optimize the benefits of treatment as prevention (TasP) among HIV+ substance users, who experience profound health disparities that amplify onward transmission risk. This project will systematically develop, refine and conduct an open pilot to assess the feasibility and acceptability of a two-phase emotion regulation intervention that targets emotional barriers to HIV-related self-care among individuals who endorse active substance use. Emotional barriers such as shame and internalized stigma have been identified as barriers to optimal HIV care among individuals struggling with HIV and substance use. To effectively implement TasP, strategies for addressing these barriers are needed. Utilizing transdiagnostic approaches (e.g., positive affect-focused emotional regulation, mindfulness and self-compassion) investigators will develop, refine and pilot a two-phase emotional regulation intervention that requires only 5 face-to-face hours and can ultimately be implemented by a case-management-level staff person or trained peer educator. The first phase of the intervention will be a multicomponent in-person intervention targeting emotional, cognitive and behavioral barriers to HIV self-care behaviors among HIV+ substance users. The second phase of the intervention will extend the intervention benefits by sending personalized positive self-reappraisal text messages in response to text message queries about participants' mood. This phase will use an innovative personalized bi-directional platform, which will leverage an existing text message delivery system. This project will be instrumental in developing a relatively low-resource intervention strategy to address unmet emotional barriers to optimal HIV-care among individuals who are actively using substances. This work will provide the necessary pilot data for a subsequent grant submission to assess the preliminary efficacy of the intervention. The resulting intervention has the potential to address emotional barriers to self-care along the HIV care cascade: including retention in care, antiretroviral treatment adherence and persistence, and ultimately viral suppression.
Investigators will develop and refine a two-phase emotion regulation intervention. This
process will involve 5 steps: 1) conducting 5-8 key informant interviews, including obtaining
feedback on a drafted manual and materials from providers and case managers, 2) integrating
the qualitative data, 3) running 2 participants through a condensed version of the
intervention and obtaining feedback on the content, language, and text message interface, 4)
integrating the additional feedback, and 5) conducting an open pilot with 10 participants to
assess feasibility and acceptability of the revised intervention. The pilot will include 3
research assessment visits which will involve completion of self-report questionnaires using
Qualtrics at baseline, within one week of completion of phase 1, and within one week of
completing phase 2. Viral load (VL) will be assessed at baseline and at the final follow up.
Qualitative interviews. The investigators will conduct 5-8 semi-structured qualitative
interviews with providers and case managers. Interviews will inquire about unmet
psychological barriers to HIV-care, perceptions of proposed domains and text message
questions and response options. All interviews will be recorded, transcribed and analyzed
using thematic analysis. Prominent themes and suggestions brought up in the interviews will
be integrated into the intervention materials and implementation.
Trial run of pilot. After integrating the feedback from the key informant interviews,
investigators will recruit two participants to complete a condensed version of the
intervention. After each of the 5 sessions, participants will be asked to complete perceived
usefulness surveys. Both participants will then be interviewed to obtain feedback on the
intervention. These interviews will be recorded, transcribed and analyzed using thematic
analysis. Prominent themes and suggestions brought up in these interviews as well as logistic
challenges will be integrated into the intervention materials and implementation procedures.
Text messages. Investigators will use questions adapted from a previously published
personalized bi-directional text message intervention involving HIV+ substance users (TxText)
to assess mood, adherence and substance use. Each participant will receive 3 texts/week
inquiring about current mood over the course of the intervention. Additionally, in phase 2
each participant will receive weekly texts asking about their medication adherence. Given the
stigmatized nature of substance use, investigators will use a coded query, adapted from
TxText, which assess substance use in the form of a weather question. This coded query
strategy has demonstrated feasibility and acceptability among a similar population of HIV+
active substance users. All participants will be reminded of the meaning of this question
during phase 1. During the last in-person intervention visit, participants will identify 5
positive self-reappraisal statements and link them to response options to the mood query
based on when they feel each would be most helpful in regulating their emotions. Throughout
phase 2, participants will then receive their linked positive-self reappraisal statements in
response to mood queries. Participants will then be asked to respond on a 6-point scale
indicating how helpful the positive self-reappraisal was (0=extremely unhelpful to 5=
extremely helpful), which will be used to assess engagement in phase 2 of the intervention.
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