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Active Not RecruitingNCT05307250

M-Suubi: A Multi-Level Integrated Intervention to Reduce the Impact of HIV Stigma

M-Suubi: A Multi-Level Integrated Intervention to Reduce the Impact of HIV Stigma on HIV Treatment Outcomes Among Adolescents Living With HIV in Uganda

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,851 (actual)
Sponsor
Washington University School of Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

M-Suubi, a three arm cluster randomized study will examine the effects and cost-effectiveness of a multi-level intervention on HIV viral suppression among 840 adolescents living with HIV (ALHIV) enrolled in 42 secondary schools with a boarding section. The investigators will test the effects of a group-based HIV stigma reduction intervention for educators (GED-HIVSR), over and above the effects of multiple family groups with HIV stigma reduction combined with family economic empowerment (MFG-HIVSR plus FEE), relative to Bolstered Standard of Care (BSOC). ALHIV will be randomized at the school level to one of three study arms

Detailed description

HIV stigma remains a formidable barrier to HIV treatment adherence among adolescents in Uganda, contributing to low rates of medication adherence and viral suppression (less than 50%) and high attrition from HIV treatment services. ALHIV experience HIV stigma (internalized, anticipated and enacted) in various settings, including families and schools, the most important developmental contexts that should otherwise be supportive of their development and wellbeing. One of the unique features about education in Uganda and other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa is the high proportion (over 60%) of school-going adolescents enrolled in boarding secondary schools - which represent a form of parental opt-in institutionalized care. ALHIV in schools are more disadvantaged and have lower levels of HIV treatment adherence due to high levels of HIV stigma within schools, rigid school structures and routines, lack of adherence support and food insecurity. Within families, HIV stigma is perpetuated in various forms including discrimination and violence, often due to unfounded fears of infection-hence undermining the quality of family relations and supports for ALHIV. Building on our research and current evidence on HIV stigma reduction, the investigators propose a multi-level three-arm cluster randomized study (M-Suubi) with the following specific aims: Aim 1: Examine the impact of M-Suubi on HIV viral suppression (primary outcome); and adherence to HIV treatment (keeping appointments, pharmacy refills, pill counts), and retention in care (secondary outcome); Aim 2: Examine the effect of M-Suubi on HIV stigma (internalized, anticipated and enacted), with secondary analyses to explore hypothesized mechanisms of change (e.g. depression) and intervention mediation; Aim 3: Assess the cost and cost-effectiveness of each intervention condition; and Aim 4: Qualitatively examine: a) participants' experiences with HIV stigma, HIV treatment adherence, and the intervention; and 2) educators' attitudes towards ALHIV, experiences with GED-HIVSR, and program/policy implementation post-training. The study will enroll 840 ALHIV recruited from 42 schools located within the greater Masaka region, heavily affected by HIV (prevalence 12% vs 7.3% national average). M-Suubi will be provided for 20 months, with assessments at baseline, 12, 24 and 36 months. Findings may inform combination intervention efforts to optimize HIV treatment outcomes and engagements in care among ALHIV.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMultiple Family Groups for HIV stigma reduction (MFG-HIVSR) plus FEEIn addition to the BSOC, ALHIV and their caregivers will participate in a family strengthening intervention plus a family economic empowerment intervention. MFG is an evidence-based family-centered, group-delivered, evidence-informed, strength-based 10-session (weekly) intervention for children whose families struggle with poverty. Six additional sessions covering HIV stigma stigma-related issues will be added. ALHIV will receive a YDA with a 1:1 matched savings program at a financial institution accredited by the Bank of Uganda. Each YDA will be opened in the name of the adolescent, with their primary caregiver as a co-signer, until the adolescent turns 18 years. The account will then be matched with money from the program on 1:1 rate.
BEHAVIORALMultiple Family Groups for HIV stigma reduction (MFG-HIVSR) plus FEE plus Group-based stigma reduction for educators (GED-HIVSR).In addition to BSOC and MFG-HIVSR+FEE, ALHIV in this arm will receive the school-level HIV stigma reduction intervention targeting teachers, school nurses, matrons, and administrators (headteachers, director of studies) in their schools. GED-HIVSR seeks to impart educators in the intervention schools with HIV related knowledge, provide a safe space for educators to explore their personal values and bias that may promote or hinder their role of supportive individuals and systems for ALHIV, and empower them with knowledge and skills to act as change agents within their schools.
OTHERBolstered Standard of Care (BSOC)All participants (in control and treatment arms) will receive medical and psychosocial support as part of the BSOC. 1) Medical SOC: All public clinics, including our study sites, follow procedures for pediatric ART initiation and monitoring, as outlined in the National Department of Health Guidelines for pediatric HIV care in Uganda. Specifically, immediately after initiation, or if clinically unstable, ALHIV are seen more frequently (weekly to monthly). Laboratory data (VL and CD4 counts) are collected every six months until the patient is stabilized and then annually, using the National Health Laboratory Service standardized protocol. A

Timeline

Start date
2022-03-15
Primary completion
2026-07-31
Completion
2026-07-31
First posted
2022-04-01
Last updated
2025-08-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Uganda

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05307250. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.