Intersectional stigma and medical mistrust are prevalent among Black and Latina/Latino Americans living with HIV and are key contributors to racial/ethnic health disparities; yet, there are no evidence-based provider-level interventions available for HIV care providers to address intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The investigators propose to develop an online provider intervention, with community stakeholders' input, that provides psychoeducation and skills-building around addressing intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The investigators will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial with 60 HIV care physicians (30/condition) to test the acceptability and feasibility of the online intervention and to determine preliminary effects (against a no-intervention control group) on providers' use of skills and HIV care delivery outcomes at baseline, immediate post, and 6-month follow-up.
The first aim will be an intervention development process that involves engaging community stakeholders to incorporate their input on the intervention manual and working with a provider training organization to develop an online platform for the initial pilot testing. The intervention will include psychoeducation and skills-building for providers to address intersectional stigma and mistrust, tailored to HIV care. This aim will include a usability test of the online intervention in 10 HIV clinical care providers. The second aim will be to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial to compare two conditions (i.e., online provider intervention versus no-intervention control) on provider training outcomes (e.g., providers' use of skills learned in the intervention) and HIV care delivery outcomes (e.g., the estimated percentage of patients lost to care in the past year) measured at baseline, immediate post-intervention, and 6-month follow-up. Clinical providers (N = 60) providing care for patients living with HIV will be randomly assigned to the online provider intervention (n = 30) or control with no intervention (n = 30). The intervention will be delivered in groups (5-10 providers per group). A mixed-methods process evaluation at immediate post-intervention will determine the acceptability, feasibility, and appropriateness of the intervention, and will be used to refine the intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
59
The intervention will consist of psychoeducation and skills-building for HIV care providers to gain knowledge and skills needed to address intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The intervention will be online and conducted in groups.
RAND Corporation
Santa Monica, California, United States
Helpful/Empathetic Responses Toward Medial Mistrust in Hypothetical Patient Scenarios
Helpful/empathic responses will be operationalized as the number of motivational interviewing (MI)-consistent statements and validation used in the written responses; this variable will be obtained by coding the responses to the Helpful Response Questionnaire using the Motivational Interviewing Skills Coding for the number of validation and MI-consistent statements used in the written response. This measure is a count variable and the values ranging above or equal to 0 (no maximum). Higher values represent a better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 2-monts after the baseline assessment, and 6-month follow-up
Provider Use of Strategies Learned in the Provider Intervention in a Role-play Simulation of Hypothetical Patient Scenarios
Provider use of strategies learned in the provider intervention in a role-play simulation will be obtained through coding that will be developed specifically for this study based on existing coding schemes (e.g., Motivational Interviewing Skills Coding, as appropriate). This variable will be calculated as the total number of training-consistent strategies used during the role-play simulation. This measure is a count variable and the values ranging above or equal to 0 (no maximum). Higher values represent a better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline and 2-month after the baseline assessment
Provider Use of Strategies Learned in the Provider Intervention in a Role-play Simulation of Hypothetical Patient Scenarios
Provider use of strategies learned in the provider intervention in a role-play simulation will be obtained through coding that will be developed specifically for this study based on existing coding schemes (e.g., Motivational Interviewing Skills Coding, as appropriate). This variable will be calculated as the total number of training-inconsistent strategies used during the role-play simulation. This measure is a count variable and the values ranging above or equal to 0 (no maximum). Higher values represent a better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline and 2-month after the baseline assessment
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