Personalized Normative Feedback to Increase HIV Testing
- Conditions
- HIV StigmaHIV Testing
- Registration Number
- NCT06969677
- Lead Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Brief Summary
Randomized trial to measure the effect of personalized normative feedback about local HIV testing rates and local rates of HIV-related stigma on self-reported HIV testing intentions and perceptions about others' HIV testing intentions.
- Detailed Description
HIV testing is a vital step in identifying and treating HIV. Research in rural Uganda reveals underestimation of community HIV testing rates and overestimation of HIV-related stigma among adults. At the same time, perceived norms (i.e., estimated rates regardless of their accuracy) are associated with personal HIV testing behavior and personal HIV-related attitudes.
This study employs a randomized controlled trial to evaluate how providing accurate information about local descriptive (i.e., behavioral) norms and local injunctive (i.e., attitudinal) norms affect HIV testing intentions. Participants are randomly assigned to one of four treatment arms: (1) they are reminded of what they thought community testing rates were in their village and then receive accurate information about high community testing rates, (2) they are reminded of what they thought local stigma rates were in their village and then receive accurate information about positive community perceptions of persons with HIV, (3) they are reminded of what they thought community testing rates and local stigma rates were in their village and then receive both types of accurate normative information, or (4) they are reminded of what they thought community testing rates were in their village and receive no further information (control group).
The study assesses how providing this type of personalized normative feedback within cohort-based data collection affects personal reports about getting tested for HIV in the next 12 months and how it affects perceptions about how many men and women in the same village will get tested for HIV in the next 12 months. It is hypothesized that providing accurate information about local community testing rates and/or attitudes toward persons with HIV will increase reported personal willingness to get tested (primary outcome) and improve the accuracy of estimated community testing rates in the future (secondary outcome).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1300
- All adults who consider Nyakabare their primary place of residence and who are capable of providing consent
- Minors younger than 18 years of age, with the exception of emancipated minors
- Persons who do not consider Nyakabare Parish their primary place of residence, e.g. persons who happen to be visiting Nyakabare at the time of the survey or who own a home in Nyakabare but spend most of their time outside of the parish
- Persons with psychosis, neurological damage, acute intoxication, or other cognitive impairment (all of which are determined informally in the field by non-clinical research staff in consultation with a supervisor)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Self-reported HIV testing intention in the next 12 months Baseline (assessed at the time the survey is administered) Regarding yourself, how likely are you to go get tested for HIV in the next 12 months? (single item)
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Self-reported perception of HIV testing among men in one's village Baseline (assessed at the time the survey is administered) How many of these men do you think will go get tested for HIV in the next 12 months? (single item)
Self-reported perception of HIV testing among women in one's village Baseline (assessed at the time the survey is administered) How many of these women do you think will go get tested for HIV in the next 12 months? Read all response options audibly, except for refuses/do not know.
(single item)
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Mbarara University of Science and Technology
πΊπ¬Mbarara, Uganda