This is a pilot study with a cross-sectional research design to recruit Hispanic/Latina and African American adolescent and young adult women, aged 13-24 years to serve as index recruiters, who will in turn recruit members of her female friendship network, aged 13 years and older to undergo HIV screening. This approach seeks to identify new HIV infections in the target population.
The proposed pilot study will utilize a cross-sectional research design to recruit Hispanic/Latina and African American young women to undergo HIV screening. The research design will consist of a friendship-based, female network recruitment approach that incorporates a dual method of incentives for index recruiters and network members as a strategy for identifying new HIV infections in the target population. Among sexually experienced young women (many of whom who reside in communities with a high prevalence of STIs and HIV), 50 who self-identify as HIV positive, 50 who self-identify as HIV negative (based on receiving a negative HIV test within 12 months prior to study consent), and 50 whose HIV status is self-reported as unknown (who have no history of prior HIV testing or who had HIV screening more than 12 months prior to date of study consent) will be recruited. These women will serve as index recruiters to recruit two or more (on average four) female friendship network members to undergo HIV screening. The index recruiters will be recruited through three participating ATN sites utilizing the existing infrastructure within the AMTUs and their community and clinical partnerships. Index participants that agree to take part in this research will be asked to self-disclose their HIV status, to complete a risk assessment and indicate their willingness to recruit their close female friends to undergo HIV screening. In addition, index recruiters who self-identify as HIV negative and those who do not know their HIV status will be invited to undergo HIV screening. Index recruiters will be given up to four months to recruit members of their friendship network. At the end of this recruitment period or after successful recruitment of two or more friendship network members, whichever comes first, all index recruiters will be asked to complete a brief questionnaire that describes factors that both facilitated and hindered their ability to recruit the friendship network members. Sexually experienced friendship network members who agree to participate in the study will also complete a risk assessment regardless of whether or not they agree to undergo HIV screening. Participation in this study will be strictly on a voluntary basis.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
535
Participants agree to recruit at least two female friends from their friendship network to undergo HIV screening.
Participants are recruited by Index Recruiters to enroll in study and receive HIV screening and complete a questionnaire either on Facilitators of HIV Screening or Barriers to HIV Screening.
University of Miami School of Medicine
Miami, Florida, United States
Stroger Hospital of Cook County
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Montefiore Medical Center
The Bronx, New York, United States
Number of young women (HIV status positive, negative, or unknown) who are identified and recruited to serve as index recruiters divided by the number of young women screened.
Time frame: 2
Proportion of index recruiters who recruit two or more of their female, friendship network members to undergo HIV screening.
Time frame: 2 years
A description of factors that facilitate and hinder index recruiters in recruiting female friendship network members.
Time frame: 2 years
A description of factors that facilitate and hinder HIV screening among female friendship network members.
Time frame: 2 years
A preliminary estimate of HIV infection prevalence among the friendship networks of all index recruiters and separately in the friendship networks of each group of index recruiters.
Time frame: 2 years
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