1. A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of an Integrated In-person and Mobile Phone Delivered Counseling and Text Messaging Intervention to Reduce HIV Transmission Risk among Male Sex Workers in Chennai, India
- Author
-
S. Balaguru, Kenneth H. Mayer, Steven A. Safren, Conall O'Cleirigh, Matthew J. Mimiaga, Soumya Swaminathan, Elizabeth F. Closson, Beena E Thomas, Katie B. Biello, Pandiyaraja Navakodi, Blake E. Johnson, A. Dhanalakshmi, and Sunil Menon
- Subjects
Adult ,Counseling ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Sexual Behavior ,India ,Transactional sex ,HIV Infections ,Pilot Projects ,Article ,law.invention ,Men who have sex with men ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Homosexuality, Male ,Sex work ,Motivation ,Text Messaging ,030505 public health ,Sex Workers ,business.industry ,Public health ,Cognitive restructuring ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Sex Work ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual Partners ,Family medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Social psychology ,Psychosocial ,Delivery of Health Care ,Risk Reduction Behavior ,Cell Phone - Abstract
Men who have sex with men (MSM) are at increased risk for HIV infection in India, particularly those who engage in transactional sex with other men (i.e., male sex workers; MSW). Despite the need, HIV prevention efforts for Indian MSW are lacking. As in other settings, MSW in India increasingly rely on the use of mobile phones for sex work solicitation. Integrating mobile phone technology into an HIV prevention intervention for Indian MSW may mitigate some of the challenges associated with face-to face approaches, such as implementation, lack of anonymity, and time consumption, while at the same time proving to be both feasible and useful. This is a pilot randomized controlled trial to examine participant acceptability, feasibility of study procedures, and preliminary efficacy for reducing sexual risk for HIV. MSW (N = 100) were equally randomized to: (1) a behavioral HIV prevention intervention integrating in-person and mobile phone delivered HIV risk reduction counseling, and daily, personalized text or voice messages as motivating "cognitive restructuring" cues for reducing condomless anal sex (CAS); or (2) a standard of care (SOC) comparison condition. Both groups received HIV counseling and testing at baseline and 6-months, and completed ACASI-based, behavioral and psychosocial assessments at baseline, 3, and 6 months. Mixed-effects regression procedures specifying a Poisson distribution and log link with a random intercept and slope for month of follow-up was estimated to assess the intervention effect on the primary outcomes: (1) CAS acts with male clients who paid them for sex, and (2) CAS acts with male non-paying sexual partners-both outcomes assessed over the past month. The intervention was both feasible (98% retention at 6-months) and acceptable (>96% of all intervention sessions attended); all intervention participants rated the intervention as "acceptable" or "very acceptable." A reduction in the reported number of CAS acts with male clients who paid them for sex in the past month was seen in both study conditions. MSW in the intervention condition reported a faster rate of decline in the number of CAS acts with male clients in the past month from the baseline to both the 3-month (B = -1.20; 95% CI -1.68, -0.73; p
- Published
- 2017