Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02444403 |
Other study ID # |
R01DA039073 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 2015 |
Est. completion date |
May 29, 2018 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2020 |
Source |
University of California, San Diego |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Background: Policing practices are key drivers of HIV among people who inject drugs (PWID).
This study prospectively examines the impact of a police education program (PEP) to align law
enforcement and HIV prevention. PEPs incorporating HIV prevention, (including harm reduction
programs like syringe exchange) have been successfully piloted in several countries but were
limited to brief pre-post assessments; the impact of PEPs on policing behaviors and
occupational safety is unknown. Objectives: Proyecto ESCUDO (Project SHIELD) aims to evaluate
the efficacy of the PEP on uptake of occupational safety procedures, as assessed through the
incidence of needle stick injuries (NSIs) (primary outcome) and changes in knowledge of
transmission, prevention and treatment of HIV and viral hepatitis; attitudes towards PWID,
adverse behaviors that interfere with HIV prevention, and protective behaviors (secondary
outcomes). The investigators hypothesize that, over the course of the 24-month follow-up, the
PEP will be associated with significant declines in NSI incidence, improved knowledge of HIV
and related infections, uptake of occupational safety measures, and decreases in behaviors
that undermine HIV prevention (e.g. syringe confiscation, police harassment of PWID at opioid
substitution therapy and syringe exchange programs). Methods/Design: ESCUDO is a Hybrid Type
2 design that simultaneously tests an intervention and an implementation strategy. Using a
modified stepped-wedge design involving all active duty street-level police officers in
Tijuana (N= ~1200), the investigators will administer one 3-hour PEP course to groups of
20-50 officers until the entire force is trained. NSI incidence and geo-coded arrest data
will be assessed from department-wide de-identified data. Of consenting police officers, a
sub-cohort (N=500) will be randomly sampled from each class to undergo pre- and post-PEP
surveys with semi-annual follow-up for 2 years to assess self-reported NSIs, attitudes and
behavior changes. Impact on PWIDs will be externally validated through a parallel cohort of
Tijuana PWIDs. Discussion: This is the first trial to assess efficacy of a PEP on policing
behaviors that place PWID and police at elevated risk of HIV and blood-borne infections.
Findings may help bring PEPs to scale in the growing number of countries where policing is a
documented driver of HIV acquisition.
Description:
The Police Education Program (PEP) and its evaluation component, has been titled Proyecto
ESCUDO (Project SHIELD). This project has the following aims: 1) To evaluate the efficacy of
the PEP on uptake of occupational safety procedures, as assessed through the incidence of
occupational needle-stick injury (NSI) (primary outcome), monitored by a department-wide NSI
surveillance program, and self-reported NSI; 2) To evaluate the efficacy of the PEP on
changes in the following secondary outcomes: i) knowledge of transmission, prevention and
treatment of HIV and related infections (sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and viral
hepatitis); ii) attitudes towards people who inject drugs (PWID); iii) adverse behaviors that
interfere with HIV prevention (i.e., arrests near syringe exchange programs (SEP) and drug
treatment locations); iv) protective behaviors (e.g., use of barrier protection,
self-reported reductions in syringe confiscation). 3) To assess potential mediating and
moderating factors that influence PEP efficacy, including changes in knowledge and
attitudinal factors and occupational constructs. The investigators hypothesize that, over the
course of the 24-month follow-up, the PEP will be associated with significant declines in NSI
incidence, improved knowledge of HIV and related infections, uptake of occupational safety
measures, and decreases in behaviors that undermine HIV prevention (e.g. syringe
confiscation, police harassment of PWID at opioid substitution therapy (OST) and SEPs).
Hypotheses:
H1. The PEP will be associated with a significant decline in NSI incidence among the force
during follow-up.
H2.1. The PEP will be associated with significantly increased knowledge of transmission,
prevention and treatment of HIV and HCV among Tijuana police officers participating in the
sub-cohort.
H2.2. The PEP will be associated with significant improvements in attitudes towards PWID, sex
workers and HIV-infected persons.
H2.3. The PEP will be associated with significantly fewer reports of syringe confiscation by
police officers.
H2.4. The PEP will be associated with lower incidence of arrests near SEP and drug treatment
locations.
H2.5 The PEP will be associated with increased use of barrier protection during pat-downs and
arrests.
H2.6. The PEP will be associated with increased knowledge about the narcomenudeo drug policy
reform.
H3.1 The impact of PEP on NSI incidence and adverse and protective behaviors will be
moderated by officers' motivation to undergo the training, years in the force, and autonomous
support received from supervisors.
Conceptual Framework of the PEP: The trans-contextual Model (TCM) has been successfully used
to evaluate injury prevention PEPs in international settings (Chung-Chan and Hagger 2012).
The investigators applied the TCM to conceptualize and assess mechanisms through which the
PEP can impact occupational safety and officers' behaviors. This model incorporates key
theoretical constructs from self-determination theory (SDT) (Deci and Ryan 2000) and the
theory of planned behavior (TPB) (Ajzen 1991). TPB emphasizes the role of psychosocial
factors in affecting decision making processes that translate to changes in behavior. Herein,
such factors include trainee attitudes, subjective norms, self-efficacy, and intentions.
These TPB constructs have had robust predictive value in the realm of injury prevention
(Sheeran and Silverman 2003, Lajunen and Rasanen 2004). SDT highlights the role of motivation
and perceived autonomy as "regulators" that may mediate the impact of training initiatives on
trainee practices and adherence. Perceived support by supervisors (autonomy support) for
injury prevention (Chan, Lonsdale et al. 1977) and motivation to participate in an
educational intervention are known antecedents for change in behavioral and corollary
endpoints (Standage, Duda et al. 2005). Validated in the realm of occupational safety and
injury prevention (Chan and Hagger 2012, Hagger and Chatzisarantis 2012), TCM is based on the
complex interplay between SDT and TPB factors in shaping the impact of educational
interventions (Chung-Chan and Hagger 2012). The TCM model also suggests that changes in
self-efficacy produced by training can be transferred to domains that are related, but do not
serve as the focus of the training intervention (Chung-Chan and Hagger 2012). Herein, TCM
elucidates the pathways through which the PEP may shift ancillary police activities,
including adherence to departmental procedures and drug policies (e.g. targeting PWID for
enforcement activities as they seek to access SEPs or OST). These shifts may improve police
occupational safety by reducing the prevalence of adverse encounters with PWID, but they may
also have collateral population health benefits such as reducing risk behavior and infectious
disease incidence among PWID. TCM has been widely used in the context of physical education
training (Hagger, Chatzisarantis et al. 2003, Hagger, Chatzisarantis et al. 2005, Pihu, Hein
et al. 2008, Hagger, Chatzisarantis et al. 2009), and research on police occupational health,
but its use in the assessment of a PEP focused on NSI prevention is innovative (Chung-Chan
and Hagger 2012).
PEP Intervention: Based on best practices established by Beletsky et al (Davis and Beletsky
2009, Beletsky, Agrawal et al. 2011, Silverman, Davis et al. 2012, Beletsky, Thomas et al.
2013), and with active input from the Instituto de Capacitacion y Adiestramiento Profesional
(ICAP, Tijuana Police Academy) instructional experts, the investigators culturally and
linguistically adapted existing PEP materials that bundle occupational safety information
with content addressing the legal, scientific, and logistical underpinnings of HIV
prevention. Through train-the-trainer workshops, the investigators prepared ICAP instructors
by building knowledge, pedagogical skills and capacity, with an emphasis on a peer-to-peer
perspective to maximize uptake (Davis and Beletsky 2009). An initial team of three trained
ICAP instructors will deliver the standardized curriculum through slide-assisted oral
presentations in one-hour sections (i.e. modules), offered consecutively in a single session.
The entire training lasts approximately three-and-a-half hours. The entire police force
mandated for periodic refresher training will be assigned to classes which receive one PEP
course over 2 years.
Study Design: ESCUDO is a Hybrid Type 2 design that simultaneously tests an intervention and
an implementation strategy (Curran, Bauer et al. 2012 ). This study has three levels: 1)
Implementation of the PEP across the entire Tijuana police department using a stepped wedge
design, and evaluating department-wide NSI incidence for the primary study outcome; 2)
Prospective 24-month follow-up of a random sub-cohort of police officers sampled from each
PEP class to assess behavioral outcomes; 3) Simultaneous longitudinal follow-up of a parallel
cohort of PWID to independently assess their experiences with police. Each of these
components is described below.
Level 1: Implementation of the PEP across the Tijuana Police Department. ESCUDO was initially
conceived as a modified stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial involving staggered
roll-out of the PEP where participants are randomly selected to transition from the control
to intervention in classes of equal numbers over a two year period. However, since randomly
assigning officers to PEP classes would interfere with the department's programmatic
priorities, the investigators modified the design to integrate the PEP into regularly
scheduled refresher training classes that were being held for other purposes (e.g., basic
police tactics). The design the investigators adopted maintains core features of a stepped
wedge design, whereby the pre-intervention period for each officer is treated as the control.
On a weekly basis, one cluster (i.e., class of 20-50 officers from different ranks and
precincts undergoing regularly scheduled refresher training) will 'step up' and cross over
from the control to the intervention condition by receiving PEP training, until the entire
force of 1200 street-level officers is trained. Incidence of NSIs (primary outcome, Aim 1)
and incidence of arrests near SEPs and drug treatment programs (secondary outcome, Aim 2),
will be assessed on the entire police department based on de-identified data.
The primary endpoint of Proyecto ESCUDO is NSI incidence (Aim 1). Since NSIs tend to be
under-reported, the investigators will collect these data two ways: 1) Through the NSI
Surveillance and Response Program (NSRP) based on prospective data from the entire police
department (Level 1); 2) Through the ESCUDO sub-cohort (N=500; Level 2; see below). The first
approach utilizes the NSRP that was implemented in 2014 by our team in collaboration with the
Police Department and the Office of Municipal Health (DMS) in Tijuana. The NSRP encourages
officers experiencing a NSI to notify their direct supervisor and immediately go to the main
office of the DMS Department of Legal Medical Experts. These are staffed 24-hours a day by a
certified medical doctor in a private medical exam room where they complete an NSI Exposure
Report Form detailing the circumstances of exposure. To facilitate reporting of NSIs, the
Tijuana police cars have a sticker outlining the NSI protocol, and the State Ministry of
Health Office in Tijuana has made free HIV, Hepatitis C, syphilis and Hepatitis B tests
available on site. NSI forms will be kept in a locked cabinet on site; the Head of Planning
and Special Projects at Tijuana's Police Department will provide quarterly reports to our
team and the Data Safety and Monitoring Board including date of NSI, whether the officer had
undergone the PEP, date of training, and context of the NSI. No identifiers are included.
Survey Data: Police officers who consent to ESCUDO are given pre and post-PEP surveys that
are self-administered. Each survey takes 10-15 minutes to complete. The survey assesses
lifetimes and recent on-duty NSIs (Aim 1), and knowledge, attitudes, subjective norms,
intentions, self-efficacy for adopting protective behaviors and adverse and protective
behaviors affecting NSIs and acquisition of HIV and other blood-borne infections (Aim 2). The
survey was adapted from items previously used by Beletsky et al. in domestic and
international settings (Davis and Beletsky 2009, Beletsky, Agrawal et al. 2011, Beletsky,
Thomas et al. 2013), and piloted in Tijuana. Since knowledge of HIV/AIDS in Tijuana is low
(Robertson, Ojeda et al. 2012), the investigators will utilize an 18-item, true/false scale
that assesses awareness of HIV symptoms, transmission, and prevention (e.g., "People who have
been infected with HIV quickly show serious signs of illness") (Carey and Schroder 2002). The
investigators have used this scale in other Tijuana studies (α = 0.75 to 0.89; test-retest
reliability= 0.76 to 0.94). Attitudinal, subjective (perceived social) norms, self-efficacy,
and intention items developed by Fisher and Fisher will be assessed using a 5-item Likert
scales (Strongly agree-strongly disagree) (Fisher, Fisher et al. 1994). Items expressing both
positive and negative statements like "Syringe Exchange Programs increase the risk of
needle-stick injuries for police" will assess attitudes on vulnerable groups. For subjective
norms, statements like "most of my colleagues think it's important to follow official search
safety procedures" will be utilized. Self-efficacy for preventive behaviors will be assessed
by items like "I am confident that I can prevent on-duty NSIs." To assess intended practices,
the investigators will utilize items such as "Next time a suspect informs me that he has a
syringe, I will confiscate it." These domains are consistent with central tenets of TPB
(Ajzen 1991).
SDT highlights the importance of motivational regulation and autonomy support in evaluating
training interventions. To measure motivational constructs, the investigators adopted items
from the Perceived Locus of Causality scale and the corollary amotivation subscale (Goudas,
Biddle et al. 1994). Items using the stem, 'I am participating in this training because:'
will list 4 items per scale. Measures include 'trainings are interesting and fun' (intrinsic
motivation; α =.88), 'because occupational safety is important to me' (identified
regulation), 'because I am required to do so' (external regulation; α =.81), and 'but I am
not interested in this topic' (amotivation; α =.84) (Standage, Duda et al. 2005). Support for
these measures is based on diverse training and other intervention evaluation research,
including Spanish-speaking settings (Goudas, Biddle et al. 1994, Ntoumanis 2001, Otis and
Pelletier 2005, Standage, Duda et al. 2005, Moreno, Cervello et al. 2007). Autonomy support
from supervisors will be measured using an adaptation of the Health Care Climate
Questionnaire (Baard, Deci et al. 2004), which uses an analogous Likert framework with a
series of items such as: ''My supervisor understands me'' (α=.92). Use of these measures is
supported by prior research in injury prevention among police (Chung-Chan and Hagger 2012).
Geo-coded Arrest Data: In addition to NSI surveillance data, the Tijuana police department is
providing our team with geo-coded arrest data to determine the extent to which the PEP
decreases the number of arrests near SEP and OST sites in Tijuana (Aim 2). Based on
methodology developed during preliminary studies (Brouwer, Rusch et al. 2012), the
investigators will examine spatial overlap between drug-related arrests and SEPs/drug
treatment sites using data mapped into GIS-based software, ArcMap 10.1 (ESRI, Redlands, CA).
Available drug possession arrest data includes all arrests in which ≥1 charge concerned drug
possession over the legal limit, drug-related crimes, the neighborhood (colonia) where the
arrest occurred and month of arrest. Using the Getis-Ord Gi* statistic, the investigators
will examine spatial patterns to identify hotspots of drug-related arrests at the
colonia-level per 1000 adult residents (e.g., neighborhoods with significantly higher or
lower rates of arrests than expected if arrests were randomly distributed across space). The
investigators will determine whether there was a higher rate of drug-related arrest in
colonias with better access to SEPs/OST sites. Access to SEPs/drug treatment sites will be
determined by applying a method proposed by Cooper et al (Cooper, des Jarlais et al. 2011)
that calculates the percent of a colonia's surface area within a 1350m radius of a SEP/drug
treatment site (the 1350m buffer zone corresponds to the median area of colonias in Tijuana).
Colonias with no surface area within the buffer zone will be defined as not having access.
Further, the investigators examine whether there is a significant increase in the average
number of arrests in colonias with greater surface area within the buffer zone through
modeling this relationship using Poisson regression.
Level 2: Aim 2 of Proyecto ESCUDO is to determine whether the PEP changes policing behaviors.
Therefore, the investigators will assess self-reported NSIs, changes in attitudes about HIV
and related infections, attitudes towards PWID, and adverse and protective behaviors that
influence blood-borne transmission risks among police and PWID as secondary outcomes among a
sub-cohort of police officers sampled from the PEP classes. Specifically, at the beginning of
each PEP session, staff will explain to the class of police officers that while the PEP
training is mandatory, the ESCUDO evaluation is voluntary. Officers not wishing to
participate are told that they can submit blank pre- and post-PEP surveys if they do not wish
to disclose their non-participation. A unique identification code will be generated for each
officer, based on their day of birth, first initial, first letter of father's last name and
mother's last name. Written informed consent to participate in ESCUDO is then obtained for
the pre- and post-PEP surveys, as well as a separate consent for follow-up. Only the latter
consent asks for personal information to permit study staff to contact them. The consent form
for follow-up also asks each officer whether they had ever encountered syringes on duty and
in the last 6 months.
Eligibility criteria for the Level 2 component of the study requires that only officers who
consent complete the pre- and post-PEP surveys and report encountering syringes within the
last 6 months comprise the follow-up sampling frame. To achieve sufficient power the study
statistician applies an algorithm to randomly sample approximately 42% of the eligible
officers from each class of 20-50 officers who are subsequently contacted for follow-up
visits. A total of 500 officers in the sub-cohort will be recruited. This sub-cohort will
undergo self-administered surveys pre-PEP, immediately post-PEP and 3, 6-, 12, 18-, and
24-months post-PEP.
While this design has standard features of a stepped wedge design (i.e., staggered transition
from the control to intervention), the evaluation differs. Unlike the standard stepped wedge
design where every cluster is assessed at each step, only one cluster will be evaluated per
step for most secondary outcomes. This was done because it would be impractical to follow
1200 officers for 2 years, and power is sufficient with a sample size of 500 for most
outcomes. Unlike the traditional step wedge design where evaluation stops once the last
cluster transitions from control to intervention, each member of the sub-cohort will be
followed for 2 years.
Follow-Up Survey: While all 1200 police officers are invited to complete the pre-PEP survey
and post-PEP survey immediately following the training with informed consent, the post-PEP
follow-up interviews occurring at 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months post-training are to be
conducted exclusively on the sub-cohort (N=500). The above measures will be adapted to focus
on the appropriate recall period. Participants will receive a voucher for movie tickets
(equivalent 20 USD) for each follow-up interview.
Follow-up: Follow-up interviews will be conducted only among the sub-cohort (N=500), who will
be asked to provide locator information at their baseline interview (i.e., home and cell
phone, pager, email, address), and ways they prefer to be contacted (e.g., SMS text).
Statistical Analysis (Aims 1-3): The primary analysis will consist of examining outcomes in
the pre-PEP vs. post-PEP period utilizing generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) applied to
repeated measures analysis of clustered data. Mixed effects models will allow us to adjust
for both within-subject and within-cluster correlations; one random effect will capture the
within cluster correlation and another will capture the nested subject-within-cluster
correlation.
Stepped wedge designs reduce contamination bias, considering that each cluster (here, each
class) acts as its own control and hence provides data in both control and intervention
periods (Brown and Lilford 2006). Some degree of contamination is likely since PEP classes
will occur over 2 years and because of the social nature of policing. The investigators will
attempt to measure this by asking officers in the sub-cohort whether other officers had
discussed any of the training topics with them prior to receiving the PEP, and whether they
discussed any of the training topics with other officers post-PEP. These circumstances will
be considered as variables in our outcome analyses. Although the investigators expect change
to occur in a linear manner (e.g., as more officers are trained fewer NSIs occur), the
intervention effect could be curvilinear due to diffusion of information from trained to
untrained officers. As such, the investigators will test for both linear and non-linear
effects of time on the outcome.
Level 3: Although the investigators aim to shift police attitudinal norms about PWID, sex
workers and HIV-positive persons and reduce adverse behaviors through a theory-driven
framework (Aim 2), it is unrealistic to expect police to admit misconduct (e.g., physical or
sexual abuse, soliciting bribes) to interviewers. Fortunately, the investigators are in the
unique position of having, Proyecto El Cuete, a parallel cohort of PWID in Tijuana
(Robertson, Garfein et al. 2014). Since 2010, 866 PWIDs have undergone semi-annual HIV tests
and surveys including questions on police encounters. This includes negative experiences such
as syringe confiscation, arrests near SEPs and drug treatment sites, sexual and physical
abuse by police, as well as positive experiences, such as police referrals to SEPs or OST.
The availability of these data enables us to externally assess the impact of the PEP on PWID
risk behaviors by comparing PWIDs' policing experiences before vs. after PEP. Since El Cuete
is funded through 2020, the investigators will have data pre-PEP, during the 2 years of PEP
scale-up, and 2 years post-PEP. The investigators hypothesize a significant interaction
between the PEP phase and Time, with the sharpest declines being observed during the post-PEP
phase. The investigators will also create models with interview time (baseline, 6-months,
12-months, through 72-months) as the sole main fixed effect and introduce a quadratic term,
as the investigators may observe a curvilinear trend due to the PEP over time. These findings
and results from Proyecto ESCUDO will be used to inform cost-effectiveness analyses, using
measures collected from both police and PWID in sensitivity analyses.