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Adherence Through Home Education and Nursing Assessment, Indonesia

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Substance Use
HIV/AIDS
Medication Adherence
Interventions
Behavioral: ATHENA
Registration Number
NCT03397576
Lead Sponsor
University of Illinois at Chicago
Brief Summary

Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) drops sharply after prison release. Effective medication adherence training immediately before and after prison release may improve health outcomes and limit transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). ATHENA (Adherence Through Home Education and Nursing Assessment) is an evidence-based medication adherence intervention, which is delivered in the patient's home by nurses and peer educators working in teams. In this study, researchers will examine the acceptability and feasibility of the ATHENA intervention through a 2-arm randomized controlled trial conducted with HIV-infected prisoners in Indonesia. Eligible subjects will be \>18 years of age, HIV-infected, and may be treatment-experienced or treatment-naive. Subjects randomized to the intervention arm will participate in monthly medication adherence counseling sessions within prison and home visits up to four months after prison release. Subjects randomized to the control arm will receive standard care, which includes a referral for HIV care after prison release. The primary endpoint is the proportion of subjects demonstrating ART adherence \>90% at 3 months after prison release. Secondary endpoints are: 1) retention in HIV care, 2) ART initiation, 3) HIV- RNA viral load, 4) CD4+ T-cell count, 5) quality of life, 6) hospitalization, 6) substance use and sexual risk behaviors at 3 months after prison release.

Detailed Description

The acceptability and feasibility of the adapted ATHENA intervention will be assessed through a 2-arm randomized controlled trial conducted in two phases with HIV-infected prisoners recruited from 2 correctional facilities in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Phase 1: HIV+ prisoners who are already aware of their status will be recruited through prison clinics and randomized to receive either the adapted ATHENA intervention or standard care as a control. Uniform data collection at baseline will include measures of ART adherence, HIV stigma, and drug dependence and CD4+ T-cell and viral load testing.

Phase 2: Subjects receiving the ATHENA intervention will participate in monthly medication adherence counseling sessions within prison, and home visits up to four months after prison release, during which intervention staff (nurses and peer educators working in teams) will deliver individualized medication adherence counseling based on the Freirian educational model.

Phase 3: Participants in both groups will be followed for 12 months after prison release, and asked to complete monthly study visits to evaluate primary and secondary outcomes.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
150
Inclusion Criteria
  • HIV infection documented by a rapid HIV test or any licensed ELISA test; and confirmed by another test using a different method, including but not limited to rapid HIV tests, Western Blot, HIV culture, HIV antigen, or HIV pro-viral DNA at any time prior to study entry; and aware of HIV status
  • age ≥ 18 years
  • Karnofsky performance score >40
  • conversant in Bahasa Indonesia
Exclusion Criteria
  • none

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ATHENAATHENASubjects in the experimental arm will participate in monthly group medication adherence counseling sessions within prison led by a nurse and peer educator. After prison release, subjects in the experimental group will participate in four home visits during which intervention staff (nurses and peer educators working in teams) will deliver individualized medication adherence counseling based on the Freirian educational model.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART)3 months after prison release

Adherence to antiretroviral therapy \>90%

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
ART initiation3 months after prison release

Having initiated or continued ART

Retention in HIV care3 months after prison release

Being seen by an HIV care provider

Viral load3 months after prison release

HIV-RNA viral load

Hospitalization3 months after prison release

Frequency of hospitalization or emergency department visits

Drug and Sexual Risk Behaviors3 months after prison release

Frequency of drug and sexual risk behaviors

CD4+ T-cell count3 months after prison release

CD4+ T-cell count

Quality of life3 months after prison release

Quality of life as assessed by WHO Quality of Life scale

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Indonesia

🇮🇩

Depok, Jawa Barat, Indonesia

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