Transgender Education for Affirmative and Competent HIV and Healthcare
- Conditions
- Stigma, SocialHealth Care AcceptabilityHIV/AIDS
- Interventions
- Other: TEACHH
- Registration Number
- NCT04096053
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Toronto
- Brief Summary
Educational workshops are an efficacious strategy to increase healthcare providers' ability to provide gender-affirming care for transgender (trans) people. This strategy may also reduce healthcare providers' stigma towards trans people and people living with HIV. There is less evidence, however, of educational workshops that address HIV prevention and care among trans women. This protocol details the development and pilot testing of the TEACHH: Transgender Education for Affirmative and Competent HIV and Healthcare intervention that aims to increase gender-affirming HIV care competency among healthcare providers.This community-based research (CBR) project involves intervention development and implementation of a non-randomized multi-site pilot study with pre- post-test design. First, the investigators will conduct a qualitative formative phase involving focus groups with 30 trans women and individual interviews with 12 providers to understand HIV care access barriers for trans women and elicit feedback on a proposed workshop. Second, the investigators will pilot test the intervention with 90-150 providers (n=30-50x3 in-person settings). Primary outcomes include feasibility (e.g., completion rate), workshop satisfaction, and willingness to attend another workshop. Secondary pre- and post-intervention outcomes, assessed directly preceding and following the workshop, include perceived competency, intention to provide gender-affirming HIV care, and attitudes/biases towards trans women with HIV. Primary outcomes will be summarized as frequencies and proportions (categorical variables) and means and standard deviations (continuous variables). The investigators will conduct paired-sample t tests to assess pre- and post-intervention differences for secondary outcomes.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 78
- Workshop participants must be 18 years or older and identify as working at a location that provides health or social services to trans women or being in-training to work in health or social services (e.g., medical student, social work student). Workshop participants may include a mix of HIV- and non-HIV service providers.
- Not fitting the above criteria.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description TEACHH TEACHH The training workshop is designed as a 3-hour session for care providers. The training will be delivered by trans women. During this training, we plan to have providers: 1) discuss human rights for trans women; 2) teach providers about common words with which to discuss gender identity and expression, and develop a basic understanding of trans healthcare, HIV prevention, and HIV treatment, and how these types of healthcare affect trans women living with and affected by HIV; 3) discuss what it means to be trans-affirming in their work and how they can make their organizations more trans- affirming; and 4) have participants complete a case study to apply what they have learned to practice. These case studies will address issues affecting trans women who are immigrants/newcomers, trans women who are living with HIV, and trans women who experience other vulnerabilities.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Workshop Recruitment Rate 3 hours Number of people who participate in the workshop / Number of people invited to participate in the workshop
Survey completion rate 3 hours Number of people who complete the post-survey/Number of people who complete the pre-survey
Workshop Completion Rate 3 hours Number of people who finish all 3 hours of the workshop / Number of people who start the workshop
Satisfaction with the workshop 3 hours Measured in two ways - satisfaction scale and willingness to attend another workshop on trans women with HIV
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method attitudes/biases, perceived competency, and behavioral intention to provide gender- affirming HIV care to trans women living with HIV 3 hours a scale adapted from (1) Nyblade et al.'s brief, standardized tool for measuring HIV- related stigma among health facility staff and (2) trans-specific questions from Bidell's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Development of Clinical Skills Scale (LGBT-DOCSS), an interdisciplinary self-assessment for health providers
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto
🇨🇦Toronto, Ontario, Canada