학술논문

A randomized clinical efficacy trial of a psychosocial intervention to strengthen self-acceptance and reduce HIV risk for MSM in India: study protocol
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Public Health. 18(1)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Mind and Body
Pediatric
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Mental Health
Prevention
Pediatric AIDS
Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*)
Clinical Research
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
HIV/AIDS
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Condoms
Counseling
Disease Transmission
Infectious
HIV Infections
Homosexuality
Male
Humans
Incidence
India
Male
Mass Screening
Research Design
Risk Reduction Behavior
Sexual Behavior
Sexual and Gender Minorities
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Standard of Care
Unsafe Sex
HIV prevention
MSM
Psychosocial intervention
Randomized controlled trial
STI prevention
Self-acceptance
Public Health and Health Services
Epidemiology
Health services and systems
Public health
Language
Abstract
BackgroundMen who have sex with men (MSM) in India are a key group at risk for HIV acquisition and transmission. They are also an extremely marginalized and stigmatized population, facing immense psychosocial stressors including, but not limited to, stigma, homophobia, discrimination, criminalization, low self-esteem, low self-acceptance, distress, and, as a result, high rates of mental health problems. Although these multi-level psychosocial problems may put MSM at high risk for HIV acquisition and transmission, currently HIV prevention interventions in India do not address them. This paper describes the design of a psychosocial intervention to reduce HIV risk for MSM in India.MethodsFunded by the National Institute of Mental Health, this study is a two-arm randomized clinical efficacy trial of a self-acceptance based psychosocial HIV prevention intervention, informed by the minority stress model and syndemic theory, that was developed with extensive community-based formative work and input from the Indian MSM community and key informants who are knowledgeable about the experiences faced by MSM in India. Participants are MSM in Chennai and Mumbai who endorsed recent sexual behaviors placing them at high risk for HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) acquisition and transmission. Enrolled participants are equally randomized to either 1) the experimental condition, which consists of four group and six individual counseling sessions and includes standard of care HIV/STI testing and counseling, or 2) the standard of care condition, which includes HIV/STI testing and counseling alone. The primary outcomes are changes in the frequency of condomless anal sex acts and STI incidence (syphilis seropositivity and urethral, rectal, and pharyngeal gonorrhea and chlamydia infection. Major study assessment visits occur at baseline, 4-, 8-, and 12-months.DiscussionHIV prevention interventions that address the psychosocial stressors faced by MSM in India are needed; this study will examine the efficacy of such an intervention. If the intervention is successful, it may be able to reduce the national HIV/AIDS burden in India while empowering a marginalized and highly stigmatized group.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02556294 , registered 22 September 2015.