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Reducing AIDS Stigma Among Health Professionals in India

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Stigmatization
Interventions
Behavioral: HIV Stigma Reduction Intervention
Registration Number
NCT02101697
Lead Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
Brief Summary

This Randomized Controlled Trial has been designed to test the efficacy of a behavioral intervention to reduce HIV-related stigma among nursing students and ward attendants in 16 sites in South India and 8 sites in North India.

Detailed Description

Across the globe, HIV stigma inflicts hardship and suffering on people with HIV and has been found to reduce the likelihood of seeking HIV counseling and testing and PMTCT. Stigma also deters infected individuals from disclosing their status, seeking timely medical treatment for HIV-related problems, reduces ART adherence, and leads to delays in clinic appointments and prescription refills, which can lead to virologic failure and the development and transmission of drug resistance. Medical professionals unfortunately constitute a significant source of stigma for PLHIV.

This study will evaluate the efficacy of a promising intervention designed to reduce HIV stigma among Indian health professionals. The intervention builds on results of our previous research, identifying prevalence and drivers of stigma and discrimination in Indian healthcare settings among PLHIV, health care providers and uninfected patients.

Specifically, the study will:

1. Adapt our pilot-tested 3-session stigma reduction intervention for partial tablet-based delivery to increase its long-term sustainability in health care settings. The two tablet-administered sessions of the intervention use interactive touch screen methodology and video vignettes tailored to situations likely to be encountered by Indian nurses and ward attendants. The third session focuses on skills-building in a group format and is co-facilitated by a PLHIV.

2. Evaluate the efficacy of the intervention in 24 hospitals in North and South India on:

1. behavioral manifestations of HIV stigma, including endorsement of coercive policies, behavioral intentions to discriminate, and non/stigmatizing provider-patient interactions.

2. the factors underlying stigma proposed by our conceptual model and targeted in the intervention modules, including fears and misconceptions regarding casual transmission (instrumental stigma), and negative attitudes toward marginalized, vulnerable groups (symbolic stigma).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
3733
Inclusion Criteria

For Nursing Students:

  1. being enrolled as a 2nd year nursing student in one of the study colleges,
  2. being 18 years or older,
  3. being able and willing to participate in the intervention and all assessments.

For ward attendants:

  1. having worked as ward attendant at one of the study hospitals for at least a year
  2. being 18 years or older,
  3. being able and willing to participate in the intervention and all assessments.
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Exclusion Criteria

a) Unwilling or unable to participate

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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
HIV Stigma Reduction InterventionHIV Stigma Reduction InterventionThe HIV stigma reduction arm group will participate in a promising intervention designed to reduce HIV stigma among health professionals. The intervention builds on results of our previous research, identifying prevalence and drivers of stigma and discrimination in Indian healthcare settings among PLHIV, health care providers, and uninfected patients.The HIV stigma reduction intervention consists of two computer-administered sessions and one group session.
Time Matched Control GroupHIV Stigma Reduction InterventionThe time-matched control group will also receive three sessions; two administered by computers and one in small group format to control for attention effects. However, rather than AIDS stigma, the content will be focused on diabetes management (a disease not considered to be stigmatized).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
instrumental and symbolic stigmaone year

Evaluate the efficacy of the intervention in a RCT, among nursing students and ward attendants on the factors underlying stigma proposed by our conceptual model and targeted in the intervention modules, including fears and misconceptions regarding casual transmission (instrumental stigma), and negative attitudes toward marginalized, vulnerable groups (symbolic stigma), which have consistently been found to drive the behavioral manifestations of AIDS stigma and discrimination.

behavioral manifestations of HIV-related stigmaone year

Evaluate the efficacy of the intervention in a RCT, among nursing students and ward attendants on behavioral manifestations of AIDS stigma including their endorsement of coercive policies, behavioral intentions to discriminate, and non/stigmatizing provider-patient interactions, using face-to-face interviews, computer-based assessments, and ratings by behavioral observers at pre-, 6- and 12 month follow-up.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

St. John's Research Institute/St John's Medical College & Hospital

🇮🇳

Bangalore, Karnataka, India

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