Retention in HIV Care for Hispanic Immigrants
- Conditions
- HIV/AIDS
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Community Health Worker
- Registration Number
- NCT03484117
- Lead Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Brief Summary
A randomized trial to test the feasibility and acceptability of an intervention to improve retention in HIV primary care in HIV-infected Hispanic immigrants compared to a "treatment as usual" condition. We will measure feasibility, acceptability, study retention, and effect sizes of outcomes in order to inform a larger trial. The intervention design is based on qualitative research with HIV-infected Hispanic immigrants and their HIV providers. The intervention will be led by a Spanish-speaking community health worker trained in HIV health promotion.
- Detailed Description
Overview:
Participants will be HIV-infected Hispanic immigrants age ≥18 years. Participants will be recruited from Partners-affiliated infectious disease and primary care clinics as well as clinics and community-based organizations in the Greater Boston area with high contact with HIV-infected Hispanics. In the intervention, a bilingual (English-Spanish speaking) community health worker (CHW) will deliver personalized sessions framed around a Spanish-language multi-media health communication tool. The CHW will deliver the intervention over a 16 to 24 week period.
Study procedures:
Participants will be HIV-infected Hispanic immigrants age ≥18 years at risk for inconsistent attendance (as measured during study screening). Participants will be recruited via provider referral, peer referral, flyers, and social media. Once an individual expresses interest in the study, a study staff member will screen that individual to assess eligibility. Individuals who are eligible will be invited to enroll through an informed consent process and complete a baseline survey. After completion of the baseline survey, study staff will randomize participants into a treatment as usual (TAU) group or intervention group. At trial exit, all participants, including the TAU group, will complete an in-depth assessment to measure their barriers to HIV care and provide feedback about their experience in the study.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 67
- Age 18 years or older and able to communicate in Spanish or English
- Born in Puerto Rico or Spanish-speaking Latin American country
- HIV-infected or HIV-positive
- New HIV diagnosis or unable to regularly attend HIV primary care appointments
- Unable to provide verbal consent due to unstable medical or psychiatric condition
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Community Health Worker Community Health Worker Participants in the intervention arm will receive 5 one-on-one sessions over 24 weeks with a Spanish-speaking CHW. At baseline and exit, all participants will be assessed using instruments to measure demographics and self-perceived barriers to care for Hispanic immigrants
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Retention in Care - Yes Responses 32 weeks A dichotomized outcome (yes/no) with yes defined as at least one visit to HIV clinic at both time periods (week 1-16 and week 17-32), and no defined as no HIV visit from at least one time period. Responses determined by review of the medical record for evidence of attended HIV clinic visits.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in CD4 T-cell Count Over 48 Weeks. Baseline to week-48 Change in CD4 T-cell count from baseline to week-48 post-randomization
Number of Participants With HIV Viral Load Suppression up to Week-24 From baseline to week-24 Participants with HIV viral load \<200 copies/ml
Change in CD4 T-cell Count Over 24 Weeks From baseline to week-24 Change in CD4 T-cell count from baseline to week-24 post-randomization
Number of Participants With HIV Viral Load Suppression up to 48 Weeks. Baseline to week-48 Number of participants with HIV RNA \<200 copies/ml
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States