HIV Health Literacy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Facilitating HIV/AIDS and HIV Testing Literacy for Emergency Department Patients
Verified date | October 2014 |
Source | Rhode Island Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that all patients should
receive information about HIV/AIDS and HIV testing orally or in writing at every HIV testing
encounter. However, for busy emergency departments (EDs), delivering information orally is a
barrier to HIV testing, and written brochures likely are not useful for those with lower
health or general literacy. Videos might be as or more efficacious than orally-delivered
information in improving HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge, particularly for those with
lower health literacy skills. However, the resources required to show videos might limit
their use in EDs. Pictorial brochures are a promising alternative, but are of unknown
efficacy.
The objectives of this study are to: (1) determine if HIV/AIDS and HIV testing information
should be delivered by a video or pictorial brochure to emergency department (ED) patients
to improve short-term (in the ED) knowledge about HIV/AIDS and HIV testing; (2) determine if
longer-term retention (over 12 months) of HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge is greater for
those who watch a video or review a pictorial brochure; (3) determine if short-term
improvement and longer-term retention in HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge is better after
watching a video or reviewing a pictorial brochure for those with lower health literacy, and
if improvement and retention also varies by language spoken (English or Spanish); and (4) if
willingness to be tested again in one year is greater for those who watch the video or
review the pictorial brochure, and if this willingness also varies by health literacy level
and language spoken.
Status | Enrolling by invitation |
Enrollment | 1200 |
Est. completion date | June 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 64 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - 18-64 years old; English or Spanish speaking Exclusion Criteria: - HIV positive; In an HIV vaccine trial; On HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis medication; In an HIV testing study; No personal telephone; Outside of the United States over next year |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Rhode Island Hospital | Brown University, Northeastern University, Olive View-UCLA Education & Research Institute, University of Alabama at Birmingham, University of Cincinnati |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change from Baseline in HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge questionnaire | The investigators will determine how short-term improvement of HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge varies by information delivery mode (pictorial brochure or video), language (English or Spanish) and health literacy level (lower or higher) per four alternative hypotheses. Improvement of knowledge is: Greatest in the video arm who primarily speak English and have higher health literacy Greatest in the video arm among English speakers or higher health literacy patients Greater in the video arm than the pictorial brochure regardless of language and health literacy level The same despite information delivery mode, language, and health literacy level |
Day 1 | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline in HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge questionnaire at 12 months | The investigators will determine how longer-term retention of HIV/AIDS and HIV testing knowledge varies by information delivery mode (pictorial brochure or video), language (English or Spanish) and health literacy level (lower or higher) per four alternative hypotheses. Retention of knowledge is: Greatest in the video arm who primarily speak English and have higher health literacy Greatest in the video arm among English speakers or higher health literacy patients Greater in the video arm than the pictorial brochure regardless of language and health literacy level The same despite information delivery mode, language, and health literacy level |
12 Months |