Having health workers assist HIV-infected persons with the recruitment and testing of their sexual contacts and biological children is an effective and efficient way of identifying additional HIV-infected persons in need of HIV treatment and HIV-uninfected persons in need of HIV prevention. However, in Malawi, a country with a generalized HIV epidemic, health workers lack the counseling and coordination skills to routinely assist their HIV-infected clients with these services. This study will determine how to help health workers to effectively and efficiently provide these services to their patients through a set of digital capacity-building tools.
Voluntary assisted contact tracing (ACT) is an evidence-based approach that efficiently identifies persons in need of HIV treatment and prevention. Malawi, like many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, has adopted ACT policies to support its "95-95-95" targets for HIV testing, treatment, and viral suppression. However, Malawi's ACT implementation has been poor due to deficits in health worker capacity and clinical coordination. Through preliminary work, our team has 1) developed a set of implementation strategies (theory-based health worker training and continuous quality improvement processes) that address these barriers; 2) packaged these strategies into a blended learning platform that combines digital and face-to-face modalities; and 3) field-tested the package in Malawi with promising preliminary results. In this proposal, the package will be rigorously evaluated in Malawi for implementation, service uptake, and cost-effectiveness outcomes. Through a two-arm pragmatic cluster randomized implementation trial, the proposed research will address these gaps through three specific aims. Twenty Malawian facilities in two districts will be randomized to receive the blended learning implementation package (enhanced) versus standard implementation package (standard). In the first aim, ACT implementation outcomes will be compared between the enhanced and standard arms. Health worker fidelity to ACT procedures will be assessed through audio-recorded ACT encounters. In the second aim, HIV service uptake outcomes will be compared between the enhanced and standard arms. In the third aim, cost and cost-effectiveness outcomes will be examined. The findings will offer important insights and innovations into how to bridge the gap between ACT research and practice, a critical step towards achieving the 95-95-95 targets.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
841
Individual training with teaching and modeling (tablet-guided, \~8 hours) Small group training with practice and feedback (tablet-guided, \~16 hours) Ongoing continuous quality improvement sessions (tablet-guided, \~2 hours/month)
Individual training with teaching (facilitator-guided, \~2 hours) Small group practice (facilitator-guided, \~1 hour) Ongoing clinic support (facilitator-guided, \~30 minutes/month)
Balaka District Hospital
Balaka, Malawi
Balaka OPD Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Chiendausiku Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Kalembo Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Kankao Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Kwitanda Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Mbera Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Namanolo Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Namdumbo Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
Phalula Health Centre
Balaka, Malawi
...and 23 more locations
Index Client Fidelity Assessment
Health care workers will be observed counseling actual index clients. The scores on the 15-item index client fidelity assessment will be compared between arms (range 0-100% with higher scores being better)
Time frame: 1 year after training
Contact Client Fidelity Assessment
Health care workers will be observed counseling actual contact clients. The scores on the 15-item contact client fidelity assessment will be compared between arms (range 0-100% with higher scores being better)
Time frame: 1 year after training
Index Clients Who Participate in Assisted Contact Tracing
The total number of index clients who participate in assisted contact tracing relative to the number of total potential index clients measured per facility per calendar quarter (3-month period). Each cluster contributes 4 quarters of data.
Time frame: 1 year after training
Contact Clients Elicited
The number of contact clients listed by participating index clients relative to the number of total potential index clients measured per facility per calendar quarter (3-month period). Each cluster contributes 4 quarters of data.
Time frame: 1 year after training
HIV Self-test Kits Distributed
The number of HIV self-test kits distributed relative to the number of total potential index clients measured per facility per calendar quarter (3-month period). Each cluster contributes 4 quarters of data.
Time frame: 1 year after training
Contact Clients Tested
The number of contact clients tested relative to the number of total potential index clients measured per facility per calendar quarter (3-month period). Each cluster contributes 4 quarters of data.
Time frame: 1 year after training
Contact Clients Living With HIV Identified
The number of contact clients living with HIV identified relative to the number of total potential index clients measured per facility per calendar quarter (3-month period). Each cluster contributes 4 quarters of data.
Time frame: 1 year after training
Incremental Cost Per Contact Tested
Incremental cost per contact tested for HIV = Total additional cost in enhanced arm ($127,319) / total number of additional individual tested for HIV in the enhanced arm (1119). The outcome is an incremental cost effectiveness ratio. Because no additional cost was incurred in the Standard arm, the value was reported as 0.
Time frame: 1 year after training
Incremental Cost Per Person Living With HIV Diagnosed
Incremental cost per contact tested for HIV = Total additional cost in enhanced arm ($127,319) / total number of additional individual diagnosed with HIV in the enhanced arm (64). The outcome is an incremental cost effectiveness ratio. Because no additional cost was incurred in the Standard arm, the value is reported as 0.
Time frame: 1 year after training
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