Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Over 2.6 million children aged 0-15 years are living with HIV globally, with the majority living in low and middle income countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Addressing stigma associated with HIV is key given the significant harm that may be experienced in the form of negative health and social outcomes, reduced access to HIV prevention services, and increased vulnerability to infection. This stepped-wedge, cluster randomized trial with assess the impact of an arts-based HIV stigma intervention on knowledge and attitudes towards children who are HIV+ and - affected; enacted, internalized, anticipated, courtesy, and perceived stigma (primary outcomes); HIV testing frequency among sexually active participants; linkage to care, antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation and adherence among HIV+ participants; and viral suppression among HIV+ participants (secondary outcomes) of children aged 10+ years in Omoro District, Uganda, post-intervention and 5-months post-intervention.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Over 2.6 million children aged 0-15 years are living with HIV globally, with the majority living in low and middle income countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Addressing stigma associated with HIV is key given the significant harm that may be experienced in the form of negative health and social outcomes, reduced access to HIV prevention services, and increased vulnerability to infection. Previous research among young people in Uganda showed that stigma is meted out in the form of verbal and physical abuse from teachers and peers (bullying), leading to social isolation, school drop-out, depression and suicidal ideation. Given the limited evidence available in support of effective stigma reduction among young people, efforts to help those affected constitute a major gap in the HIV prevention literature. Purpose: The overall aim of the proposed study is to implement and evaluate an arts-based intervention rooted in local cultural knowledge to reduce stigma and improve HIV prevention outcomes among HIV positive and HIV- affected young people. Methods: The study will employ a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized design involving crossover of clusters from the control to the intervention arm. The stepped-wedge design will consist of three groups (Group 1, Group 2, Group 3), each comprised of two primary and two secondary schools. Each time period will be 8 weeks in duration. Group 1 will receive the intervention for three time periods (24 weeks). Group 2 will receive the intervention over two time periods (16 weeks). Group 3 will receive the intervention over one time period (8 weeks). Formative qualitative interviews will also inform the arts-based HIV-stigma intervention and obtain additional data for research objectives. We will conduct at 50 qualitative semi-structured interviews, lasting between 30 minutes to 45 minutes, with purposively selected students, Elders, and teachers at participating schools. A community advisory committee (CAC) will inform all design elements and supervise implementation. Team members will collaborate to develop, implement, evaluate and disseminate results of the proposed study. Primary endpoints will include: 1) HIV stigma reduction; and, 2) knowledge increase. Secondary endpoints will include: 1) HIV testing frequency among sexually active participants; 2) linkage to care among HIV+ participants; 3) ART initiation among HIV+ participants; 4) ART adherence among HIV+ participants; and 5) viral suppression among HIV+ participants. Secondary endpoints will be measured through a local AIDS non-governmental organization (TASO) and the community health clinics who have agreed to provide access to their medical files. No blood samples will be drawn. Ages 10+ will participate in the study with parental consent. Survey Data Analysis: Descriptive analyses will be used to describe clusters relative to their size at each time point (planned sample size and achieved sample size), key demographics and outcomes, and comparison of randomization groups. Main analyses will follow an intention-to-treat approach, with clusters analyzed as per original treatment assignment. Main analyses will use Linear Mixed Effect Models (LMEM) or Generalized Linear Mixed Effect Models (GLMEM) to assess the intervention effect. LMEM will be used for continuous outcomes that approach normality and GLMEM for binary and other types of outcomes. Normality will be assessed by the model residuals and outliers by Cook's Distance, Leverage and Residuals. Calendar time and school semester will be entered as fixed effects. The multilevel structure will be defined by participants as level 1 and clusters as level 2. All clustering levels will be specified as random effects. Sensitivity analyses will be performed of drop-outs and completers to better understand possible biases arising from attrition. A significance level of 0.05 will be used in all statistical tests. Interview Data Analysis: Interviews will be coded using a constant-comparative and concept-development approach based on emergent themes that evolve throughout the course of the research. Initial coding will be done jointly by two researchers, and consensus negotiated. Matrix methodology techniques described by Miles, Huberman and Saldana will also be used in the analysis. First level analysis will be used to assign a descriptive code (label) to a segment of the data to give it meaning. As the researchers become more familiar with the data, pattern coding will be used to label emerging themes. An inductive approach will be used to analyze the data by iteratively coding and identifying themes and relationships between themes. Memos will be used to record methodological decisions and analytic insights. Validity will be assessed by convening focus groups for member checking the interpretation of data. Significance: The study it will fill this evidence gap in HIV stigma intervention research and practice by creating and evaluating a transformative education and arts-based intervention using a participatory approach. The method of transforming cultural knowledge to an arts-based intervention may be a reproducible method for locally acceptable intervention design to improve HIV outcomes among young people. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04946071
Study type Interventional
Source Thompson Rivers University
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 5, 2021
Completion date June 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04531761 - Evaluating the Efficacy of the Parent Support Program N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05623202 - Pilot Study of Capacity-oriented Intervention to Promote Food Security and Diet Quality Among Hispanics/Latinos N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03740269 - Oral Health Educational Program for Knowledge,Attitude,Practice of Oral Health Among Agroup of Egyptian School Girls
Recruiting NCT05626231 - Development of a Training Intervention to Improve Mental Health Treatment for Gender Minority Youth N/A
Completed NCT05297721 - Nurses' Level of Knowledge on Skin Tears: A Cross-Sectional Study
Completed NCT04096196 - A Game-based Educational Approach to Promote Child Safety Knowledge and Behaviours N/A
Recruiting NCT05454618 - The Decision To Enroll In Therapeutic Clinical Trials In A Pediatric Cancer Clinical Network
Not yet recruiting NCT05036057 - Turkish Version of the Individual Knowledge Statement Questionnaire of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
Recruiting NCT06100198 - The Effect of Nutrition and Exercise Program on the Health of Community-dwelling Older Adults N/A
Completed NCT03287622 - Evaluation of an Interactive Opioid Risk Education Program (STOMP) for Parents N/A
Withdrawn NCT05073562 - Nutrition Intervention to Address Anemia Among Adolescent Girls in Liberia N/A
Completed NCT03673267 - Nutricity: A Pilot Study to Improve Parental Nutrition Literacy N/A
Completed NCT05244161 - A Quasi-experimental Evaluation of the Malezi Program in Tanzania N/A
Recruiting NCT04888416 - Implementing Outcome Measures in Stroke Rehabilitation N/A
Completed NCT03710837 - The Effect of Pain Education on Multidisciplinary Healthcare Students' Understanding of Chronic Pain N/A
Completed NCT04128241 - Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices on Fad Diets of a Panel of Spanish Consumers: Protocol of a Cross-sectional Study
Completed NCT04656522 - Comic Intervention for Sexual Violence Prevention and Post-rape Care N/A
Completed NCT04184219 - Determinants of Knowledge About and Use of Dietary Supplements
Recruiting NCT04182282 - Online Training & Certification for Competency in Dementia Friendly Hospital Care N/A
Completed NCT03774602 - Evaluation of the Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP) in Mozambique Using Mixed Methods N/A