The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of Our Family Our Future, an integrated intervention for preventing HIV and depression onset among adolescents.
Adolescent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and depression present significant public health challenges for South Africa, a country with the largest HIV epidemic globally and where structural factors including violence and poverty increase susceptibility for poor mental health. In families already experiencing psychological distress, adolescents face elevated risk for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) including HIV and depression. Preventive interventions are urgently needed during adolescence when risks for HIV, STIs, and depression in-crease exponentially. Preventive intervention strategies for adolescents should substantively involve families who can tailor prevention content to meet the unique needs of individual adolescents and reinforce formation and habituation of prevention behaviors. Moreover, evidence indicates common family risk and protective factors for adolescent HIV/STI risk behaviors and depression, underscoring the need for a family prevention approach. However, key gaps exist in family prevention science. In South Africa, few empirically supported family interventions integrate prevention of HIV/STI with depression for adolescents. This intervention (called Our Family Our Future) uses a resilience-oriented approach engages families in adolescent prevention from low-resource settings facing high adversity. The study will focus on adolescents (14-16 years) who are at an ideal developmental transition for family engagement in prevention. The age- and developmentally-tailored intervention - called Our Family Our Future - is based off of two empirically supported interventions that have been integrated and adapted to South Africa. In a pilot randomized trial, Our Family Our Future exhibited outstanding acceptability, feasibility and promising direction of effects including reductions of depressive symptoms; lower rates of sex; decreased unprotected sex; increased HIV testing; increased knowledge, motivation, intentions and self-efficacy for protective HIV/STI behaviors; improved family interactions; and increased resilience. Now investigators propose the next phase of this research program, an efficacy study of Our Family Our Future with three aims: (1) test the efficacy of the Our Family Our Future intervention in preventing HIV/STI acquisition among adolescents (14-16) with depressive symptoms by reducing HIV/STI risk behavior, and reducing depressive symptoms. The project will randomize N=880 adolescents to Our Family Our Future intervention or usual care with 6- and 12-month outcome assessments; (2) examine the extent to which the impact of the Our Family Our Future intervention is a) mediated by changes in resilience; behavioral skills; norms and attitudes relating to sex, condom use, gender; and family communication and functioning and b) moderated by the effect of sociodemographics, family HIV, and social protections; (3) identify barriers and facilitators to implementing Our Family Our Future within a large community-based organization setting with wide reach to provide data for future dissemination and scale-up.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,758
Our Family Our Future is a 'selective' behavioral prevention program, designed to address HIV/STI acquisition, sexual risk behavior, and depression among adolescents (ages 14-16) in communities with high HIV prevalence and from families where adolescents and parents already exhibit mild, potentially troublesome, depressive symptoms but do not reach the threshold for further screening for a significant clinical depressive disorder. Participants receive the intervention in a community setting, in a facilitated group format. The intervention is comprised of 3-hour sessions, held weekly for 3 consecutive weeks with an individual family meeting in the third or fourth week depending on family desires.
Masiphumelele
Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Prevalence of HIV and/or Chlamydia and/or Gonorrhoeae
We will examine whether the intervention produces reductions in HIV and STI prevalence using biological tests for HIV, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. We report on the prevalence of any HIV or STI (positive for one or more of HIV and/or Chlamydia and/or Neisseria).
Time frame: 12 months
Number of Participants Engaged In Vaginal Sex
We will examine whether the intervention produces reductions in the number of participants engaged in vaginal sex and condom use.
Time frame: 12 months
Depressive Symptoms
We will examine whether the intervention produces reductions in depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms will be measured through symptom scores on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Scores are summed, and range from 0 to 60. Higher scores correspond with worse depressive symptoms. There are ranges for the severity of depressive symptoms and these are as follows: 0-15: May indicate no or low levels of depressive symptoms. 16 or higher: Suggests a risk for clinically significant depressive symptoms.
Time frame: 12 months
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