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Stigma, Social clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05299645 Recruiting - Hiv Clinical Trials

The BeT Study Intervention to Reduce Disparities in HIV Prevention and Care

BET
Start date: February 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Stigma prevents young transgender women from having access to HIV prevention and care services, despite the fact that these services are freely accessible to all Brazilians in the Unified Health System (ie, SUS). Levels of HIV testing and access to care for young people are uneven. The purpose of this proposal is to generate data to address stigma in the public health system and intervene to overcome the challenges of youth with the navigation of health systems. The Brilhar e Transcender (BeT) study will include young trans women, aged 18 to 24, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The BeT intervention has been found to be preliminarily efficacious in a pilot study. This proposal is for a study to test the effectiveness of an intervention to improve HIV prevention and care engagement among young trans women (N=150) at risk of HIV in Brazil.

NCT ID: NCT05218681 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance Use Disorders

Nursing Attitudes Towards SUD

Start date: November 17, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose is to measure substance use disorder (SUD)-related stigma among hospital-based nurses using validated survey instruments, and attempt to reduce stigma through a combination of individual and unit-based educational and participatory interventions.

NCT ID: NCT05213182 Completed - Social Isolation Clinical Trials

Peer Support Intervention to Mitigate Social Isolation and Stigma of Adolescent Motherhood in Zimbabwe

Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A community-based peer support intervention for adolescent mothers aged 14-18 years in Harare, Zimbabwe was developed and tested in partnership with adolescent mothers, community health workers, and key community stakeholders. The intervention leveraged peer support, technology via WhatsApp Messenger, community health workers, peer educators and involvement of key community stakeholders to reduce prevalence of loneliness, depressive symptoms and common mental disorders, improve perceived social support, and develop coping, parenting, and communication skills to mitigate potential stressors and stigma of adolescent motherhood.

NCT ID: NCT05174936 Not yet recruiting - HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials

ResIlience-based Stigma REdUction Program ("Rise-up")

Start date: December 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Stigma and discrimination related to HIV and AIDS ("HIV-related stigma") have been identified worldwide as major barriers to HIV treatment and care, posing challenges to HIV prevention efforts and provision of adequate care, support, and treatment. Despite decades of global efforts to tackle HIV-related stigma, previous interventions designed to reduce stigma have been largely ineffective. The knowledge gaps and challenges for combating HIV-related stigma are partly rooted in the complexity and diversity of the stigma and partly in the limitations in current conceptualization of stigma reduction efforts. Recent research, including our own preliminary data, has shown the promise of resilience approaches that focus on the development of strengths, competencies, resources, and capacities of people living with HIV (PLWH) and those of their real or surrogate family members and healthcare facilities to prevent, reduce, and mitigate the negative effects of stigma. However, the resilience approach, while hypothesized, has not been widely tested in intervention trials. In the current application, we propose to develop, implement, and evaluate a theory-guided, multilevel multimode resilience-based intervention via a stepped-wedge randomized trial among 800 PLWH and their real or surrogate family members as well as 320 healthcare providers in Guangxi, China where we have built a strong research infrastructure and community collaboration through NIH-funded research since 2004. The primary outcome will be viral suppression among PLWH, and the intermediate outcomes will include resilience resources at the levels of individuals, the real or surrogate family members, and healthcare facilities as well as chronic stress response and adherence to treatment and care. The proposed study is innovative as it addresses a number of knowledge gaps in HIV-related stigma reduction intervention research based on both a conceptualization of stigma reduction and advancement in intervention research methodology (e.g., multilevel and multi-component intervention modality, a stepped wedge design, the addition of biomarkers to assess the effects of stigma, and targeting primary HIV clinical outcomes such as viral suppression). The proposed research is significant as it addresses a critical public health issue in the US and globally. The proposed intervention protocol, if proven efficacious, has the potential to be replicated in other low- and middle-income countries to mitigate the negative impact of stigma on the HIV treatment and care continuum.

NCT ID: NCT05152342 Completed - Behavior Clinical Trials

Reducing Stigma Among Individuals With Addiction and Staff in the Criminal Justice System

Start date: September 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Stigma is one of the most pervasive barriers to addiction care in the U.S. criminal justice (CJ) system. However, there have been no stigma reduction interventions developed for this context. This project addresses this gap with a new multi-level stigma intervention, Combatting Stigma to Aid Reentry and Recovery (CSTARR), for justice-involved people with addiction and criminal justice staff. This intervention will be implemented in 6 (mostly rural) counties in TN for clients and staff in the Tennessee Recovery Oriented Compliance Strategy (TN-ROCS) program, which coordinates multiple CJ sectors (i.e., courts, corrections, probation, treatment) to divert and treat people with addiction. This project aims to 1) examine the feasibility, acceptability, and implementation considerations of integrating CSTARR in the TN-ROCS program, and 2) determine whether CSTARR impacts individual, staff, and program-level outcomes. We aim to recruit 25 stakeholders, 80 clients, and 75 staff over the course of this 18-month project to participate in our intervention and evaluation efforts. Staff and clients will be asked to complete online surveys before and after the intervention, as well as 1- and 3-month follow ups, for which they will receive gift-cards. The overall goal of this project is to examine the feasibility and utility of stigma reduction efforts in the criminal justice system to determine whether they can help facilitate engagement with evidence-based addiction care and improve client and staff outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT05127707 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance Use Disorders

Strategies to Reduce Addiction Stigma Among Health Professionals

Start date: November 13, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of exposure to stigma reduction message frames communicated by visual campaigns and narrative vignettes among a national sample of health professionals.

NCT ID: NCT05126225 Completed - Hiv Clinical Trials

Buddhist Understanding and Reduction of Myanmar Experiences of HIV Stigma and Exclusion

BURMESE
Start date: July 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to explore a multi-leveled conceptualization of the effects of HIV stigma on HIV care engagement in Myanmar by conducting a mixed-method study.

NCT ID: NCT05124665 Completed - Hiv Clinical Trials

Interrupting HIV and TB Stigma in the Household in Uganda

Start date: October 25, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will carry out a prospective, household cluster-randomized, implementation trial evaluating a complex, multi-component, social and behavioral intervention designed to normalize the acceptance of HIV testing in the household and increase diagnosis of HIV.

NCT ID: NCT05107609 Active, not recruiting - Stigma, Social Clinical Trials

Psychobiological Processes in Social Evaluation

Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Higher-weight individuals face pervasive weight-related stigma and discrimination in their daily lives. There is conceptual and empirical evidence to suggest that weight stigma contributes to worse physical and psychological health outcomes, mediated by the deleterious psychobiological responses to psychosocial stress. Activating self-soothing emotional states (such as self-compassion) may protect against this psychobiological cascade, conferring resilience to negative social evaluation (such as weight stigma). This proof-of-concept study aims to establish the feasibility of an experimental protocol testing whether an acute self-compassion intervention can attenuate the psychobiological stress response to induced weight-based social-evaluative threat. Participants will be randomized into either self-compassion intervention or rest control groups. A standard body composition assessment will be used to induce weight stigma among young women who self-identify as "higher-weight." Stress-sensitive biomarkers (i.e., salivary cortisol and heart-rate variability) along with psychological indices of self-conscious emotions will be used to quantify the psychobiological stress response. This novel pilot study will contribute to efforts to understand the psychobiological processes by which self-compassion facilitates adaptive responding to acute stress, and will help inform future tests of interventions focused on mitigating the harmful health effects of social stigma.

NCT ID: NCT05107401 Completed - Stigma, Social Clinical Trials

Crowdsourcing to Reduce HIV Stigma Among Adolescents and Young Adults in Kazakhstan

Start date: January 24, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will assess whether a digital crowdsourced intervention can reduce HIV stigma and promote HIV self-testing among adolescents and young adults (AYA). NIH has emphasized the need for research on interventions to reduce HIV-associated stigma and its impact on the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS, particularly in low and middle income countries (LMICs). The proposed study has the highest public health significance: it uses a community-based participatory approach to engage local AYA to develop a digital crowdsourced HIV stigma reduction and self-testing intervention to reduce HIV stigma and increase HIV testing. Study Aim 1: To develop a crowdsourced digital HIV stigma reduction and self-testing intervention targeting AYA in Kazakhstan. Using a community-based participatory approach that engages local adolescents and young adults (AYA) and youth organizations, we will launch a national crowdsourcing contest in which AYA will design multimedia content to reduce HIV stigma in order to promote HIV testing among peers. Study Aim 2: To pilot test this crowdsourced HIV stigma reduction and self-testing intervention in a preliminary efficacy trial. We will assess the intervention's feasibility and acceptability and obtain preliminary estimates of its effects on decreasing HIV stigma (primary outcome) and increasing HIV testing (secondary outcome) among AYA in Kazakhstan who received the intervention compared to individuals who did not. Participants (n=168) will be randomized 1:1 to: 1) receive the winning multimedia crowdsourced HIV stigma reduction content and a link for HIV self-testing, or 2) receive standard Kazakhstan Ministry of Health HIV informational materials and a link for HIV self-testing.