The Alternative Sexualities Health Research Alliance (TASHRA) will work collaboratively with Gilead Sciences, Inc. to study Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake and adherence; levels of stigma around PrEP use; and changes in health beliefs around PrEP use. The study design will compare kink-involved or bondage/discipline/dominance/submission/sadism/masochism (BDSM)-involved individuals responses to generic vs. kink-focused printed and educational-entertaining video materials in a 12 month crossover study. The primary objective of the study is to examine factors that increase the uptake of PrEP in a novel sexual subculture by testing the impact of an entertainment-education intervention designed to be highly relatable to kink-involved individuals. Secondary Objectives: PrEP4Kink will measure knowledge of PrEP and attitudes towards PrEP uptake over time. These are elements identified by the Health Belief Model: perceived risk of HIV; susceptibility to HIV; perceived barriers to PrEP uptake; perceived benefits of PrEP uptake; perceived effectiveness of PrEP; and self-efficacy of initiating PrEP uptake. Moderating and ancillary factors will be measured, and their relation to the elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed. Moderating factors include the centrality of kink identity; the level of kink community involvement; the types and frequencies of kink and sex behaviors. Demographic variables will be measured and their relation to elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed, including age; number of years involved in kink; gender identity; sex assigned at birth; racial/ethnic identity; educational attainment; income level; insurance coverage; sexual orientation identity; and sexual attraction.
The primary objective of the study is to examine factors that increase the uptake of PrEP in a novel sexual subculture by testing the impact of an entertainment-education intervention designed to be highly relatable to kink-involved individuals. In TASHRA's 2016 Kink Health Survey of 1,139 kink-involved individuals, the rate of HIV was approximately 10 times the national index. 37 (80.4%) of a total of 46 persons living with HIV were cis-male men who have sex with men (MSM) and men who have sex with men and women (MSMW). Seven (15.2%) were persons who had ever used intravenous drugs. Of those living with HIV, 38 (82.6%) were engaged in kink activities at high risk of blood exposure, 8 (17.4%) were engaged in activities at low risk of blood exposure, and none were engaged only in activities considered to have no risk of blood exposure. It should be noted that the sample for the 2016 Kink Health Survey was limited in racial and ethnic diversity, while having a high degree of gender and sexual orientation diversity. Educational interventions appear to be effective in increasing PrEP uptake. One study of 116 African American women found that an avatar-led eHealth video that focused on education about PrEP from relatable characters did have a significant impact on intentions to seek out PrEP and to recommend PrEP to other women. Social cognitive theory predicts that perceived similarity of models enhances imitation and observational learning (together called vicarious learning). Social cognitive theory also proposes efficacy as an important element in the learning process by enhancing perseverance in learning and behavior. Efficacy is strongly affected by vicarious learning opportunities and verbal persuasion, which are key pathways for entertainment-education interventions. Entertainment-education through digital storytelling engages learners and enhances discussion and aids understanding of the content. PrEP4Kink will provide kink-involved participants with an opportunity to receive PrEP information that is culturally tailored to their sexual and community identities, which does not exist in current promotional materials. PrEP4Kink will measure knowledge of PrEP and attitudes towards PrEP uptake over time. These are elements identified by the Health Belief Model: perceived risk of HIV; susceptibility to HIV; perceived barriers to PrEP uptake; perceived benefits of PrEP uptake; perceived effectiveness of PrEP; and self-efficacy of initiating PrEP uptake. Moderating and ancillary factors will be measured, and their relation to the elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed. Moderating factors include the centrality of kink identity; the level of kink community involvement; the types and frequencies of kink and sex behaviors. Demographic variables will be measured and their relation to elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed, including age; number of years involved in kink; gender identity; sex assigned at birth; racial/ethnic identity; educational attainment; income level; sexual orientation identity; and sexual attraction. The primary endpoint is participant-reported uptake of PrEP. This is measured by survey at 3 months, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months of the study. Another primary outcome includes the number of people who persist in using PrEP during the study and the number of pills taken according to clinical guidelines (adherence) since the previous data collection period for each person reporting persistant use of PrEP. These measures will be self-reports at T2 (3 months), T3 (6 months), T4 (9 months) and T5 (12 months) (Please see attachments titled "PrEP4Kink Measures" and "PrEP4Kink Theoretical Framework." The secondary endpoints are Knowledge about PrEP and Attitudes towards PrEP. The Knowledge about PrEP measure comprises participant-reported items designed to measure key constructs in the Health Belief Model. These participant-reported items will measure perceived benefits of PrEP, the perceived effectiveness of PrEP; perceived risk of HIV acquisition; and perceived susceptibility to HIV acquisition. Items on the survey will also measure perceived barriers to PrEP uptake. Another section of the survey instrument will measure Attitudes towards PrEP. This section will comprise items to measure self-efficacy of initiating PrEP treatment. Another set of items will measure PrEP stigma, including shame, character judgment, and perceived level of social support. Please see attachments titled "PrEP4Kink Measures" and "PrEP4Kink Theoretical Framework."
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
57
Videos relating to PrEP use, its benefits, side effects, and other information. The educational/round-table video will highlight individuals from diverse backgrounds and identities who will share their experiences using PrEP, including perceived benefits and effectiveness, experienced barriers to PrEP uptake, their reasons for using PrEP, and their own self-efficacy. The control group's (generic / standard video) materials will be focused on PrEP uptake without a kink identity perspective. The treatment group's materials, however, will include videos that feature kink-identified individuals who discuss PrEP uptake through a kink perspective.
TASHRA
Rio Vista, California, United States
PrEP Uptake
Number of participants who test HIV-negative and begin using PrEP, divided by the number of participants who test HIV-negative and are provided information on PrEP through the study. This is a dichotomous variable reported as a percentage.
Time frame: one year
PrEP Adherence
Self-report number of pills missed in previous 7 days will be measured every 3 months throughout the implementation period.
Time frame: one year
Percentage of Treatment Persistence
Number of people who continue to use PrEP at each T measurement during the study after self-report of starting PrEP, divided by the number of people who use PrEP at previous T measurement (reported as a percentage).
Time frame: one year
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