The proposed study will test a mHealth peer navigation intervention for trans women living with HIV in a trans public health clinics to increase initiation and engagement in mental health and substance use services. The peer will navigate and provide support in-person and via mobile phone with HIPAA-compliant text messaging. Ecological momentary assessments will be conducted to enhance self-monitoring of mental health stress and coping-related substance use.
Trans women carry the largest population burden of HIV in San Francisco and have low utilization of mental health and substance use services. The investigators' goal is to use lessons learned in a prior previously-funded Special Projects of National Significance to conduct a pilot peer delivered mHealth support and navigation intervention for trans women living with HIV. The investigators will work with partners in San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH) clinics. The SFDPH is a HRSA-funded entity with trans-specific clinics and a host of in-house referrals to trans-competent mental health and substance use services. Despite availability of trans-specific services, considerable systems barriers exist. Trans clinics have limited clinic hours, and providers have large patient loads wherein medical gender affirmation and HIV care needs must be attended to in short visits. Visit and clinic time and large patient volume leaves providers with little time to ensure continuity in mental health and substance use referrals. To overcome these issues, a peer navigator will deliver mobile and in-person support and navigation to increase substance use and mental health service initiation and engagement among trans women living with HIV in trans health clinics. The research team has already conducted formative research with community members, key stakeholders and providers in San Francisco to help shape and refine the intervention model during the implementation phase of the research.In the implementation phase, the research team will pilot the mSN intervention to improve initiation and engagement in mental health and substance use (MHSU) services.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
Peer navigation, asynchronous support via SMS, Motivational Interviewing, virtual social support group focused on mental health and substance use, linkage and follow-up
San Francisco Department of Public Health
San Francisco, California, United States
RECRUITINGMental health services initiation
The proportion of participants enrolled in the study who initiate mental health services.
Time frame: 12 months
Substance use services initiation
The proportion of participants enrolled in the study who initiate substance use services.
Time frame: 12 months
Mental health services engagement
The proportion of participants who remain enrolled in mental health services throughout the follow-up period.
Time frame: 12 months
Substance use services engagement
The proportion of participants who remain enrolled in substance use services throughout the follow-up period.
Time frame: 12 months
Patterns and correlates of mental health and substance use services engagement
Combined analysis of mental health and substance use services engagement as measured by self report. Patterns and correlates of engagement will be measures using data from self report surveys.
Time frame: 12 months
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NONE
Enrollment
40