View clinical trials related to HIV.
Filter by:ADHOC-LA is an observational study of people living with HIV who either are taking, or have taken, a long-acting injectable therapy to manage their HIV. Data from this study will be used to research the ways in which HIV impacts the lives of these patients.
To improve the knowdelge about the sexual health needs of perinatally HIV-infected adolescents living in France.
The HIV-infected population is aging due to the success of combination antiretroviral therapy, which prolongs survival, as well as the growing number of newly diagnosed cases in adults 50 years old and over. This real-life, observational and retrospective study aims to evaluate the virological efficacy, toxicity and tolerability of Doravirine-based regimens in aged HIV-1 positive patients (> 50 years), focusing on metabolic patterns and inflammation markers.
This is a cross-sectional study to assess awareness, knowledge, and implementation of the concept of U=U among Thai PLHIV and Thai HIV healthcare providers, as well as associated factors. Data will be collected on an online survey platform called Alchemer. Questions on the survey will evaluate awareness, knowledge, and implementation of U=U among participants, as well as collect sociodemographic information of participants.
Evaluate the impact of phone calls from a male counselor in increasing linkage to HIV care and PrEP among male partners of pregnant women attending PMTCT.
Physical activity helps to improve health and prevent chronic diseases. However, the fatigue usually hampers the training and execution of physical exercises, especially in people with chronic fatigue syndromes (CFCs), such as persons living with HIV (PLWH). We hypothesize that the "activity pacing", i.e. the strategy to optimize daily physical activity into manageable exercises in a way that should not exacerbate fatigue symptoms, may help a progressive improvement in physical activity of a group of PLWH with fatigue symptoms. Motivation and adherence to exercise will be monitored through the use of digital supports.
Gender norms embedded in the health-system and broader community shape patient-provider relationships in ways that may undermine the provision of antiretroviral treatment (ART) counseling for men and women in Uganda. This study seeks to develop and evaluate the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of an innovative gender transformative implementation strategy to improve HIV provider capacity for equitable HIV care and ART adherence counseling.
3-arm type 1 pilot implementation-efficacy trial for people with alcohol use disorders to examine the preliminary effectiveness and feasibility of an adapted 2-session, computerized and person delivered relapse prevention intervention.
The LATA trial will find out if taking a long-acting injectable form of HIV medicines, called cabotegravir and rilpivirine, every 2 month works as well as taking tablet HIV medicines every day in young people aged 12-19 years of age. The trial is organised by an international group of researchers from Europe and Africa, and will include 460 young people, from Kenya, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
BACKGROUND: Long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (LAI-ART) is poised to revolutionize HIV treatment and prevention. Community pharmacies could serve as another place for people with HIV to get their ART injections. However, pharmacist and healthcare practitioner attitudes towards pharmacist administration of LAI-ART are understudied. Financial and human resources, pharmacist training, or changes in workflow have not been outlined. Little is known about whether patients will accept ART injections given in pharmacies. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this project is to address the above knowledge gaps. The information generated can assist in the development of tools that can help scale community pharmacy-based delivery of LAI-ART. METHODS: Using a mixed-methods approach to better understand the pre-implementation environment, the study will employ electronic surveys and will administer semi-structured interviews via telephone for three key stakeholder groups: HIV clinic staff members, community pharmacists, and persons with HIV. Surveys will assess the appropriateness, acceptability, and feasibility of LAI-ART administration in community pharmacies. A semi-structured interview guide has been developed using constructs from the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Comparisons between and across stakeholder groups will be performed, looking for common themes as well as discrepancies.