Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Project Wellness: Increasing HIV Testing Among West African Immigrants
Project Wellness is a new intervention that combines the use of culturally-sensitive, video-based education, a general health screening approach, and a community pharmacy setting into one program to improve black African immigrant participation in voluntary HIV testing. The study is divided into three phases: qualitative research; video production; and a feasibility trial. In Phase 1, the investigators will conduct in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with black African participants to obtain insights on overlapping and resonating themes that will help increase participation in HIV testing among black Africans in the Bronx. In Phase 2, data obtained through qualitative work will guide the development of four health education videos. A culturally-tailored educational video on diabetes, hypertension, and HIV will be developed and produced for each gender and in both English and French. In phase 3, the investigators will test the feasibility of a pharmacy-based, culturally-tailored, general health screen that includes rapid HIV testing. The trial will help determine the feasibility of using a computer-based model; recruitment of black Africans in the pharmacies; acceptance of testing; and linking individuals diagnosed with health problems into medical care. A secondary analysis will also determine predictors of refusing to be tested.
Black African immigrants living in the United States have exceptionally high rates of HIV
and AIDS. Sub-Saharan Africa remains the epicenter of the global HIV epidemic, accounting
for 22.5 of the 33.3 million people living with HIV worldwide. Political, economic, and
social instability in many African countries has resulted in an escalating number of
Africans migrating to the United States. The number of black African immigrants in the U.S.
is growing, having increased 166% between 1990 and 2000. The 1.4 million documented
African-born immigrants in the U.S. in 2007 does not account for the many undocumented
Africans living in the U.S. Immigrant-related stressors, particularly for undocumented
migrants, present challenges to both black Africans and healthcare providers seeking to
engage this community in HIV testing and treatment. Characteristically long delays in
accessing health services and accepting HIV testing have resulted in a greater proportion of
black Africans presenting with an AIDS diagnosis (45%), compared to both U.S.-born
non-blacks (25%) and U.S.-born blacks (35%). As the U.S. community of black Africans
continues to grow, efforts are needed to reduce the impact of HIV within such marginalized
communities.
The lack of culturally sensitive voluntary HIV testing programs has discouraged early
diagnoses and treatment for African-born immigrants in the United States. The investigators
are developing a new theory-driven HIV testing program that builds on the successful history
of developing HIV testing models in the emergency department (ED), but relies on partners
from the black African immigrant community to address specific cultural, social, and
practical barriers to HIV testing faced by their communities. Traditional methods of HIV
testing have not been successful in testing high percentages of black Africans in the U.S.
for several reasons including (1) their reluctance to access health care for prevention; (2)
their unwillingness to disclose information to their social networks, thus rendering
ineffective the CDC-recommended social networking strategies for reaching disaffected
populations; (3) the stigma of HIV; and (4) cultural and migrant-specific factors that pose
barriers to accessing health care. The investigators propose to partner with black African
immigrant community members to identify the cultural and migrant-specific factors that
interfere with HIV testing, identify those that characterize the African migrant experience
regardless of country of origin, and develop videos that can be used to increase willingness
to be tested at community testing sites. The investigators plan to develop and pilot Project
Consensus, which will use a trusted community setting - the pharmacy - to establish a
permanent site for HIV testing that will engage large numbers of black Africans; increase
HIV awareness and eliminate the need to rely on social networks; and reduce stigma by
placing HIV testing in the context of a general health screening.
This proposal is based on eight years of research and experience developing and testing
BRIEF, a Bronx-based rapid HIV testing program in the ED that utilizes theory-based risk
reduction videos and a user-friendly interactive touch screen computer program. The
investigators have tested over 53,000 Bronx residents, with high acceptance rates (95%) for
adult HIV testing and a high rate (85%) of linking HIV+ patients into specialized medical
care. Project Consensus was developed out of recognition that BRIEF does not eliminate
important barriers to HIV testing for black African immigrants, a community that suffers
disproportionately from the health and social consequences of HIV. Given an increasing
emphasis within the U.S. on efficient preventive care, this intervention has the potential
to provide an exemplary method for engaging members of immigrant communities in earlier
stages of disease.
The study has three phases: Phase 1 consists of interviews and focus groups to obtain
community input on social and cultural barriers to testing. This input will frame the
content of a health education video, as well as the creation of an effective HIV testing
program. Phase 2 will develop the HIV testing intervention. Phase 3 is a feasibility trial
to prepare for a future randomized controlled trial. An advisory board composed of a diverse
group of African community leaders will inform and guide all three phases. There are three
specific aims:
1. Use individual interviews and focus groups to identify specific barriers to HIV testing
and assess appropriate methods to increase participation in voluntary HIV testing among
black African immigrants;
2. Develop a theory-based HIV video to educate and encourage black African immigrants to
get tested;
3. Establish the feasibility of the intervention in a community pharmacy that places HIV
testing in a general health context, as determined by: standard deviation for the
primary outcome of HIV testing rates, use of a computer-based model; recruitment of
black Africans in the pharmacies.
1. Determine the percentage of individuals diagnosed with one of three chronic
illnesses linked to care and determine predictors of those that refuse testing.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Caregiver), Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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