The purpose of this study is to determine whether a program of regular, theory-based text messages that encourages the message recipient to continue practicing safer sex (i.e., using condoms with sex partners) is effective in maintaining positive behavior change in women who have completed a brief safer-sex training.
The overarching aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a technology-enabled behavioral intervention, Mujer Segura Siempre (Healthy Woman Forever: MSS), that is designed to maintain the effects of a brief, single-session sexual risk reduction intervention (Mujer Más Segura: MMS) that was proven efficacious in reducing incidence of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among drug- and non-drug-using Mexican female sex workers (FSWs) in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez. Despite the efficacy of MMS, it is well known that treatment effects of health behaviors erode and that adherence to new health behaviors is often poor, with relapse rates up to 50% or more within 6 months, perhaps because the constructs responsible for behavior acquisition differ from those that sustain behavior change. This innovative behavior-maintenance intervention, Mujer Segura Siempre (MSS), will be delivered using text messaging. It incorporates concepts that are theorized to be important to sustain positive behavior change, and it builds on maintenance-specific content and skills that have been significant in interventions focused on other health behaviors (e.g., smoking cessation, weight loss). All women enrolled in the study will begin by receiving the Mujer Más Segura (MMS) counseling, with specific information for women who are intravenous drug users (IDU) in addition to being FSWs. High levels of injection and non-injection drug use have been reported by FSWs and their male clients in our study sites, making it imperative to address safer injection practices in both the initial behavior change program and in our text-based maintenance program. The text messages that constitute the experimental part of this study will be based on maintenance-specific behavioral and cognitive constructs that are theorized to be involved in behavior maintenance, including self-regulatory focus, maintenance self-efficacy, and relapse prevention planning. The MSS text messaging maintenance intervention will be compared to time-equivalent exposure to general health text messages. Our specific aims are: Aim 1: Determine if the MSS intervention (MMS counseling plus 24 months of behavioral maintenance text messages-Group 1) is associated with significant reductions in HIV/STI incidence (primary outcome) relative to a time-equivalent control condition (counseling + 24 months of general health text messages-Group 2) among drug-using and non-drug-using FSWs in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez. Aim 2: Determine if the MSS intervention is associated with increased use of condoms for vaginal and anal sex with male clients, better attendance at regularly scheduled STI screenings, and reduced sharing of injection equipment for FSW-IDU (secondary outcomes) relative to a time-equivalent control condition. Aim 3: Determine if substance use factors (frequency, intensity, and patterns of alcohol and drug use, including injection use, binge use, polydrug use) mediate or moderate intervention efficacy, taking into account structural and environmental risk factors (e.g., availability of condoms, drugs in the workplace), maintenance constructs (e.g., relapse prevention planning, self-efficacy maintenance), and personal characteristics (e.g., age, sexual abuse, depression). Aim 4: Evaluate the cost-effectiveness of MSS compared to the control condition, Mujer Más Segura alone (based on data from previous studies), and usual care in Mexico. To accomplish these aims, investigators will deliver MSS to 600 HIV-negative FSWs (300 in Tijuana, 300 in Cd. Juarez) who report unsafe sex with at least one client in the previous 6 months, and randomize them to either one of two groups: Group 1 (n=300), MSS text-based maintenance program for 24 months post-counseling; or Group 2 (control condition, n=300) general health text messages for 24 months post counseling. Both groups will be assessed at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months post-counseling.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
600
Participants receive personalized text messages twice a day, five days per week. Messages are designed to encourage women to maintain positive behavioral changes they have made in response to the baseline safer-sex training that is delivered to all participants regardless of intervention assignment. Message content is based upon theoretical constructs of behavior-change maintenance as articulated by Voils et al. (Health Education \& Behavior, 2013). Personalization elements include participant's name, times of day when she prefers to receive messages, and specific motivators of behavior change she expressed in the baseline interview.
Participants receive generic health-promotion text messages twice a day, five days per week.
PreveCasita
Tijuana, Estado de Baja California, Mexico
HIV and STI incidence
Time frame: 24 months
Condom use
Number of times a condom is used expressed as a proportion of total number of vaginal and anal sex acts with male clients
Time frame: 24 months
Attendance at regularly scheduled STI screenings
Percentage of regularly scheduled STI screenings that participant attends during the 24-month follow-up period
Time frame: 24 months
Sharing of injection equipment
Applies to IDU participants only: number of times participant shared her injection equipment (needles, etc.) with another IDU expressed as a proportion of total number of injection events within a specified recall period
Time frame: 24 months
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