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RecruitingNCT06117163

Integrated Mental Health Care for Pregnant Women With HIV in Kenya: The Tunawiri Study

Integration of a Collaborative Care Model for Mental Health Services Into HIV Care for Pregnant and Postpartum Women in Kenya (the Tunawiri Study)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
900 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Colorado, Denver · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
15 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study seeks to improve mental health, pregnancy, and HIV outcomes among pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV with common mental health disorders in Kenya. The investigators will tailor a collaborative care model for peripartum women with HIV experiencing mental health symptoms and evaluate its impact on participants' mental health, antenatal, and HIV care outcomes. The investigators will actively engage key stakeholders throughout the process and assess scalability and sustainability through multi-method approaches. This study will contribute to the overall goal of achieving optimal health outcomes for women living with HIV and their families in sub-Saharan Africa.

Detailed description

Common mental disorders (CMD) of depression and anxiety are prevalent and largely untreated among Kenyan pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV (PPWH). CMD lead to poor maternal and child health outcomes and contribute to lack of HIV care engagement and virologic failure in PPWH. While efficacious treatments for CMD exist, scaling treatment within routine health care in low- and middle-income (LMIC) settings will require stakeholder engagement and both effectiveness and implementation data to inform scale up and sustainability. The study team has integrated other efficacious interventions into antenatal (ANC) and HIV care in Kenya. The investigators now propose to integrate proven mental health services using a collaborative care model, combined with a low intensity evidence-based intervention (problem solving therapy), while targeting known social determinants of HIV-related health for PPWH (stigma and IPV). Building on the current multidisciplinary approach for HIV care in Kenya, the proposed Collaborative Care Model (CCM) will utilize existing peer mentor mothers, non-specialist behavioral care managers, and psychiatric nurses; and will incorporate a consultant psychiatrist into the ANC/HIV care team. Guided by the EPIS (Exploration-Preparation-Implementation-Sustainment) framework, the overall study goal is to integrate collaborative care for perinatal CMD within routine ANC/HIV services in Kenya, assess the costs and cost-effectiveness of this approach, and work with policy and decision makers to determine key considerations for scale-up. Specifically, in Aim 1, the investigators will identify contextual barriers and facilitators to refine an optimal integration model for delivering collaborative care model using multimethod data collection (focus groups with providers, in-depth interviews with key informants, and a clinic readiness checklist). A workshop with the study Advisory Board comprising of both county and national level stakeholders, will allow investigators to translate findings into a locally relevant CCM. In Aim 2, the investigators will test CCM in antenatal care for PPWH in a hybrid type 2 implementation-effectiveness trial using a stepped wedge design at 15 primary health care facilities in southwestern Kenya. The investigators will introduce CCM care for PPWH diagnosed with CMD during antenatal care. The co-primary health outcomes at 12 months postpartum will be (1) recovery from depression or anxiety symptoms in PPWH, and (2) proportion PPWH with sustained viral suppression and retention in HIV care. Key implementation outcomes are feasibility and acceptability. Finally, in Aim 3, the investigators will refine CCM implementation strategies through cost-effectiveness and dissemination research. The investigators will carry out costing and cost-effectiveness analysis and invite policy and decision-makers to participate in a nominal group technique process to elucidate factors for further scale up and sustainment of the CCM approach. Findings from this study will guide the development of a scalable model adaptable to other LMIC settings, contributing to global HIV and maternal health goals while addressing the burden of untreated CMD.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCollaborative Care ModelThe investigators propose a CCM called Tunawiri, meaning "thrive" in Kiswahili, that will be integrated within an existing multidisciplinary team of clinicians, mentor mothers, and other clinic staff in Kenyan antenatal care clinics. CCM includes: 1) clinic-level sensitization and integration, 2) Screening for CMD including anxiety, depression, and trauma symptoms, 3) Problem-solving type cognitive behavioral therapy delivered by lay health workers, 4) Decision Support and monitoring via an Electronic Health Registry, and 5) Psychiatrist case review and nurse-managed mental health medication.

Timeline

Start date
2024-10-01
Primary completion
2027-07-31
Completion
2028-05-31
First posted
2023-11-03
Last updated
2024-12-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Kenya

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06117163. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.