In sub-Saharan Africa, engaging men in HIV prevention, care, and treatment has proven challenging. Along all steps of the HIV care-seeking cascade, men exhibit worse care-seeking behaviors than women. They are less likely to be tested for HIV, initiate combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), and be retained in cART care. Additionally, men rarely engage in the care of their female sex partners, even though couple care-seeking is associated with marked improvements in condom use within HIV-discordant couples. Option B+, Malawi's program for providing immediate, lifelong combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) to all HIV-infected pregnant women at the time of diagnosis, is an important entry-point for involving male partners in care. This is a pilot randomized controlled trial (N=200 women) comparing two strategies of male partner involvement within the Option B+ program. In both arms (patient referral and contract referral) women will be encouraged to invite their male partners to accompany them to the clinic for couple HIV counseling and testing. In the contract referral arm, if the couple does not present within one week, the male partner will receive a home visit encouraging them to present to the clinic. We will compare the two arms for 1) uptake of couple HIV counseling and testing (cHCT), 2) uptake of cART for women, and 3) linkage to care for HIV-infected men. Results are expected to inform a larger trial and ultimately improve care-seeking in Malawi's HIV program. Objective 1: Determine acceptability of male partner recruitment for cHTC within an Option B+ context. We will assess acceptability of eligible females to participate in this pilot RCT and reasons for non-participation. Objective 2: Assess whether study arm (patient referral versus contract referral) is associated with cHTC uptake. We will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of male partner recruitment. This study will contain two arms: patient referral and contract referral for uptake of cHTC (primary outcome).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
A female partner signs a contract saying it is permissible for a community worker to trace a male sex partner in the community.
A patient agrees to recruit their partner using the invitation.
Bwaila District Hospital Antenatal Unit
Lilongwe, Central District, Malawi
Number of Women Who Came With Their Partners and Received Couple Counseling and Testing
Based on whether the female partner brings her male partner to the antenatal clinic for couple HIV counseling and testing (as recorded on study case report forms) as the primary measure of uptake. We will compare time to couple HIV counseling and testing between groups using the Kaplan Meier method and a log rank test.
Time frame: three months
Female First Option B+ Follow-up Visit
It will be assessed whether the female participants return for their first Option B+ visit (using the clinic's routine Option B+ records). The number retained will be compared.
Time frame: three months
Male Linkage to Care
It will be assessed whether newly diagnosed HIV-infected male partners are linked to care within one month of learning their HIV positive result with their partner. This will be assessed from abstraction of routine clinic records at Martin Preuss Center.
Time frame: one month from male presentation to the clinic
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