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Tough Talks COVID-19 Digital Health Intervention for Vaccine Hesitancy Among Black Young Adults: Protocol for a Hybrid Type 1 Effectiveness Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial

Authors :
Henna Budhwani
Allysha C Maragh-Bass
Elizabeth E Tolley
Maria Leonora G Comello
Marie C D Stoner
Margo Adams Larsen
Donald Brambilla
Kathryn E Muessig
Audrey Pettifor
Christyenne L Bond
Christina Toval
Lisa B Hightow-Weidman
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, 2023.

Abstract

Background Interventions for increasing the uptake of COVID-19 vaccination among Black young adults are central to ending the pandemic. Black young adults experience harms from structural forces, such as racism and stigma, that reduce receptivity to traditional public health messaging due to skepticism and distrust. As such, Black young adults continue to represent a priority population on which to focus efforts for promoting COVID-19 vaccine uptake. Objective In aims 1 and 2, the Tough Talks digital health intervention for HIV disclosure will be adapted to address COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and tailored to the experiences of Black young adults in the southern United States (Tough Talks for COVID-19). In aim 3, the newly adapted Tough Talks for COVID-19 digital health intervention will be tested across the following three southern states: Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina. Methods Our innovative digital health intervention study will include qualitative and quantitative assessments. A unique combination of methodological techniques, including web-based surveys, choose-your-own-adventures, digital storytelling, user acceptability testing, and community-based participatory approaches, will culminate in a 2-arm hybrid type 1 effectiveness implementation randomized controlled trial, wherein participants will be randomized to the Tough Talks for COVID-19 intervention arm or a standard-of-care control condition (N=360). Logistic regression will be used to determine the effect of the treatment arm on the probability of vaccination uptake (primary COVID-19 vaccine series or recommended boosters). Concurrently, the inner and outer contexts of implementation will be ascertained and catalogued to inform future scale-up. Florida State University’s institutional review board approved the study (STUDY00003617). Results Our study was funded at the end of April 2021. Aim 1 data collection concluded in early 2022. The entire study is expected to conclude in January 2025. Conclusions If effective, our digital health intervention will be poised for broad, rapid dissemination to reduce COVID-19 mortality among unvaccinated Black young adults in the southern United States. Our findings will have the potential to inform efforts that seek to address medical mistrust through participatory approaches. The lessons learned from the conduct of our study could be instrumental in improving health care engagement among Black young adults for several critical areas that disproportionately harm this community, such as tobacco control and diabetes prevention. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05490329; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05490329 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/41240

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be60961a3987aa11647ff97459405393
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17615/e9wh-x359