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Culturally Congruent HIV Risk Reduction App for Young Women, an Acceptability & Pilot Evaluation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
STDs
HIV
Interventions
Behavioral: Understanding Reproductive Health for Ladeez (GURHL) Code
Registration Number
NCT02733692
Lead Sponsor
City University of New York, School of Public Health
Brief Summary

Smartphone applications and mobile technologies offer users the potential to access critical information (e.g., proper condom use, directions to testing sites, and other sexual and reproductive health services) when it is needed most. Relevant findings will identify areas where existing interventions may be leveraged and adapted to work among young women of color in an urban setting and their networks. As SRH smartphone apps continue to proliferate, this study will expand researchers', developers', and health educators' limited knowledge about the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of a sexual health educational app tailored with and for young Black and Latino women, aged 18-25 in NYC, including whether this app acts as a gateway to sexual health educators, clinical and other service providers. If proven effective, findings from this study will identify areas where existing interventions may be leveraged and adapted to work among a YBLW and their networks, and potentially adapted for other high needs communities.

Detailed Description

New HIV, Chlamydia and Gonorrhea infections are highest among young Black women and Latinas aged 13 to 29 years old compared to White women, which negatively impacts other sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Given that young women have a substantial need for SRH services and a high smartphone ownership, unique opportunities to utilize mobile apps(applications) to decrease HIV risk behaviors may exist.

A tailored, culturally congruent, smartphone app co-developed with and for young Black and Latino women (18 to 25 years old) not yet publicly available offers a unique opportunity to conduct a feasibility, acceptability, and pilot RCT. Using this app, this pilot that will: a) assess feasibility of the sampling, consent, recruitment and retention techniques; b) collect acceptability and usability data and cultural congruence on the app; a and c) collect pilot data to test differences between intervention and control groups on the preliminary estimates of app effectiveness to inform a potential larger-scale study. The investigators propose YBLW between 18 and 25 years old in NYC will use a mobile-based health education app to access SRH education information. Additionally, those who use the tailored SRH app will have more self-reported connection to SRH services, better knowledge of SRH education domains, and how to link to clinical services (e.g., PREP, PEP, EC, birth control, HIV, STD, and pregnancy testing), compared to the control group. Analysis for the first aim will employ process measures and the second and third aims are mixed-methods aims.

Analysis will compare differences between the 2-arms and indiscernible differences and culturally tailored usability will be explored via focus groups and web analytics.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
110
Inclusion Criteria
  • women between 18 and 25 years old;
  • self-identify as either Black and/or Latina;
  • own a smartphone (iOS or android);
  • live in NYC;
  • report vaginal or anal intercourse in their lifetime;
  • report unprotected intercourse in their lifetime;
  • healthy (not controls) adults. There will be estimated total 110 of said subjects.
Exclusion Criteria
  • being married or partnered for more than one year,
  • report only being sexually active with women,
  • pregnant or have children 2 years old or younger,
  • HIV+ status,
  • men,
  • individuals under 18 and over 25,
  • live in a place other than New York City,
  • formal training as a sexual peer health educator (beyond a high school health class) or
  • unable to read English.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
GURHL Code Smartphone applicationUnderstanding Reproductive Health for Ladeez (GURHL) CodeExperimental arm will receive the 'Understanding Reproductive Health for Ladeez (GURHL) Code 'app' (application) for their smartphone with sexual health information. The intervention is embedded in the smart phone application. This includes sexual and reproductive health knowledge, plus access to a National Planned Parenthood health educator, and directions to other nearby clinics. Participants will be assessed using A-CASI at 3 months after enrollment.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Preliminary Efficacy1 Improvement in Sexual Health Knowledge Condom Use3 months

Effectiveness of the app based on reported knowledge of where to get condoms and how to use properly.

Preliminary Efficacy 2 Improvement in Sexual Health Knowledge HIV and STD3 months

Effectiveness of the app based on reported knowledge of what behaviors increase the risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases

Preliminary Efficacy 3 Improvement in Sexual Health Knowledge Connection to Services3 months

Effectiveness of the app based on reported knowledge of connection to sexual and reproductive health clinical services, based on whether women communicated with a reproductive health educator and whether she sought sexual and reproductive health services in person.

Preliminary Efficacy 2 Improvement in Sexual Health Knowledge Sexual and Reproductive Health Services3 months

Effectiveness of the app based on reported knowledge of what sexual and reproductive health services exist and where to access them

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Usability 4B Ease of App usage3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the ease of usage and if users liked and understood the contents

Usability 2 Actions Taken3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the actions users take during sessions (each action coded as positive regardless of which one, including other links clicked on, audio listened to or video links clicked on)

Usability 6 User Friendliness3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the users' assessment of usefulness, trustworthiness and usability

Usability 5 Facilitators and Barriers3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by user reports of facilitators and barriers to usage.

Usability 1 Number of Times Used3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the number of times the app is opened

Usability 3 Duration3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the duration of page visits

Usability 4A App performance3 months

The usability of the app will be determined by the number of technical errors encountered by users.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

CUNY

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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