The goal of PROJECT SUSTAIN is to optimize Healthy Choices to advance an adaptive and scalable intervention designed to improve self-management of alcohol and HIV in Young People with HIV (YPWH) while understanding the context for state-wide implementation and sustainment in a Hybrid Experimental Design (HED). SUSTAIN utilizes mHealth and telehealth intervention delivery of Healthy Choices (HC), combined with text messaging between sessions, to increase the likelihood of daily medication adherence (primary outcome), and increase the likelihood of achieving viral suppression and meeting criteria for no risky alcohol use at month 3 (secondary outcome).
Primary aim: To test whether, on average, delivering (vs. not delivering) a text messaged prompt focused on medication adherence or stress increases the likelihood of medication adherence by the end of the current day. Secondary aim: To test whether offering (vs. not offering) a Healthy Choices telehealth coaching session at the end of week 2 (day 14) increases the likelihood of achieving viral suppression and meeting criteria for no risky alcohol use at month 3. Implementation Aim: Assess barriers and facilitators to the implementation and sustainment of intervention sequences for state-wide scale up using mixed methods (EPIS qualitative interviews, youth satisfaction and dose received, fidelity for telehealth, paradata for mHealth, and cost-effectiveness analysis). Cross-project Moderator Aim: Explore age, biological sex and gender, ethnicity, other substance use, and mental health as moderators of intervention effects. Primary hypothesis to be tested: Delivering (vs. not delivering) a text messaged prompt will lead to greater likelihood of medication adherence by the end of the current day. Secondary hypothesis to be tested: Offering a Healthy Choices telehealth coaching at the end of week 2 will lead to greater likelihood of achieving viral suppression and meeting criteria for no risky alcohol use at month 3 (post-intervention) compared to not offering a Healthy Choices telehealth coaching session at the end of week 2.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
Healthy Choices is an adapted and developmentally tailored intervention designed to address self-management of risk behaviors and HIV from Motivational Enhancement Therapy, a brief alcohol intervention in SAMHSA's registry of evidenced-based programs. For the purposes of this project, this intervention will be delivered as a combination approach, with all participants receiving an initial session via CIAS, and randomized to either receiving a telehealth session with a trained interventionist at week 2, with additional randomizations for telehealth sessions at weeks 4 and 6. The goal is to test if delivering (vs. not delivering) a coaching session increases the likelihood of achieving viral suppression and meeting criteria for no risky alcohol use at month 3
This within-participant micro-randomization will test whether, on average, delivering (vs. not delivering) a text messaged prompt focused on medication adherence or stress increases the likelihood of medication adherence by the end of the current day .
Florida State University, Center for Translational Behavioral Science
Tallahassee, Florida, United States
RECRUITINGUniversity of South Florida
Tampa, Florida, United States
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITINGNortheastern University
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITINGUniversity of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITINGART Adherence
Antiretroviral (ART) adherence will be assessed daily using an Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) survey delivered via SMS. Individuals will be asked whether they took some or all of their medication.
Time frame: Daily for 56 Days
Alcohol Use
Alcohol will be assessed using the Timeline Followback (TLFB) measure to capture amount of drinking over a 30 day period, assessed at baseline, and at the 3 and 6 month follow-ups. Participants complete a 30 day calendar that assesses number of drinks per day and number of hours spent drinking per drinking day.
Time frame: Baseline, 3 month, and 6 month
HIV Viral Load
HIV Viral Load collected via Dried Blood Spot (DBS) kits. The limit of detection (LOD) of the m2000 test is 832 copies/mL or Log 2.92 copies/mL. For samples with VL above the LOD (\>Log 2.92) can be quantified so a VL is provided. In case of samples with less than LOD is given as \<2.92 but it's reported as detected as the presence of HIV virus is detected but cannot be quantified as it's below the LOD so cannot be measured. And samples that are not detected are reported as 'not detected.'
Time frame: Baseline, 3 month, and 6 month
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