Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT06347146
Bridges2Scale: Testing Implementation Strategies
Bridges2Scale: Testing Implementation Strategies for an Economic Empowerment Intervention Among Young People Orphaned by AIDS
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 1,440 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Washington University School of Medicine · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 11 Years – 17 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare two multifaceted strategies (standard vs enhanced) for scaling Bridges in a two-arm Hybrid III effectiveness-implementation cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) in adolescent and youths affected by AIDS \[AYaAIDS\] (ages 11-17 years) from 48 schools in the Greater Masaka region of Uganda. The main aims of the clinical trial are: Aim 1. Compare the implementation effectiveness of the standard implementation strategy vs. an enhanced implementation strategy. The investigators will assess fidelity to Bridges (primary implementation outcome) and sustainment of Bridges (exploratory implementation outcome). Aim 2. Determine the clinical effectiveness of Bridges implemented via a standard vs. enhanced implementation strategy. Aim 3: Explore implementation processes, mechanisms, and determinants. Aim 4. Compare the cost and cost-effectiveness of the two implementation strategies. Using an activity-based ingredients approach, the investigators will examine how much each strategy costs to achieve a unit of effect.
Detailed description
Economic empowerment (EE) interventions have demonstrated substantial promise in reducing HIV-related risk-taking behaviors, and improving ART treatment adherence and mental health outcomes. Our group has demonstrated the effectiveness of a multi-component EE intervention, Bridges, in four NIH-funded randomized control trials (RCT) in Uganda. Bridges involves: 1) financial literacy training (FLT) and mentorship; 2) family income-generating activities (IGA); and 3) incentivized savings via a matched Youth Development Account (YDA) for education, family small business investment, and/or health-related expenses. Bridges has demonstrated robust effects on HIV-related risk-taking behaviors, antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, mental health, psychosocial outcomes, educational achievement, family economics, and family cohesion. Yet, scaling EE interventions has been a challenge, signaling the need to identify and test implementation strategies and examine determinants of implementation and sustainment. In Bridges2Scale, the goal of this clinical trial is to compare two multifaceted strategies (standard vs enhanced) for scaling Bridges in a two-arm Hybrid III effectiveness-implementation cluster RCT in adolescent and youths affected by AIDS \[AYaAIDS\] (ages 11-17 years) from 48 schools in the Greater Masaka region of Uganda. The main aims of the clinical trial are: Aim 1. Compare the implementation effectiveness of the standard implementation strategy vs. an enhanced implementation strategy. The investigators will assess fidelity to Bridges (primary implementation outcome) and sustainment of Bridges (exploratory implementation outcome). Aim 2: Determine the clinical effectiveness of Bridges implemented via a standard vs. enhanced implementation strategy. The investigators will assess HIV prevalence (primary outcome measured via participants' HIV status). In exploratory analyses, the investigators will assess economic stability, school attendance and attainment, sexual risk-taking behavior, mental health functioning, viral suppression (for AYLHIV), and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use (for HIV-negative adolescents). Participants from each of the 48 schools will be randomly assigned to one of the two study conditions (n=720 participants; n=24 schools per study condition) such that all selected children from a particular school will receive the same intervention to reduce contamination. After the baseline assessment, data will be collected at 4 follow-up time points (12 months, 24 months, 36 months, and 48 months). The investigators will compare the implementation effectiveness (mean levels of fidelity) of the standard implementation strategy to the enhanced strategy and compare whether adolescents in the enhanced implementation strategy will have a lower odds of HIV prevalence at the final measurement point (48 months). The investigators will also compare the superiority of the enhanced implementation strategy to the standard implementation strategy group in lowering sexual risk-taking behavior, improving economic stability, education related outcomes (school attendance and attainment), and mental health functioning (for all adolescents), viral suppression (for AYLHIV), and PrEP use (for HIV negative adolescents). Aim 3: Explore implementation processes, mechanisms, and determinants. Using mixed methods, the investigators will apply standardized measures and semi-structured interviews with implementing teams to explore any modifications to the two implementation strategies, perceptions of the implementation strategies (acceptability, appropriateness, feasibility), the mechanisms through which they may operate, and determinants (barriers and facilitators) of implementation that will inform future efforts to scale Bridges and other EE interventions. Aim 4: Compare the cost and cost-effectiveness of the two implementation strategies. Using an activity-based ingredients approach, the investigators will examine how much each strategy costs to achieve a unit of effect.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Financial Literacy Training (FLT) workshops | Adolescents and youths and their caregivers will receive six 1-2 hour workshop sessions that cover components on saving, and financial management. The sessions will: introduce participants to saving, saving strategies, career planning, and the utilization of financial institutions, including saving in banks. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Mentorship | Each adolescent and youth will have a mentor who will visit with them monthly for the duration of the intervention. The one-to-one mentorship program is intended to help AYaAIDS overcome a variety of challenges they face in daily life by fostering meaningful and lasting relationships with near peer or adult role models. Resilience theory posits that having a supportive adult outside the family reduces the impact of stress on AY's mental health. Mentors will be high school students who will be trained by the schools or NGO staff depending on study condition. All mentors will be reimbursed for their transport expenses to the field, plus an equivalent of a $5 gift card for airtime per visit. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Income Generation Activity (IGA) | Participants will be trained on investing in income-generating activities (IGA) during the FLT workshops and will be allowed to use up to 30% of their matched savings to invest in an IGA intended to benefit the adolescent and youth (AY) and their caregiving families. The IGA portion is intended to promote economic stability. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Youth Development Accounts (YDA) | Each adolescent and youth (AY) will receive a youth development account, which is a matched savings account held in the AY's name in a financial institution under the Central Bank (Bank of Uganda). Any of the AY's family members, relatives, or friends is encouraged to contribute towards the YDA. The account is then matched with money from the program. The match cap (maximum family contribution to be matched by the program) will be an equivalent of US$10 a month per family or US$200 for the 20-months intervention period. AY who save the maximum amount will have $600 ($200 plus $400 in match-a 2:1 match rate). |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-06-04
- Primary completion
- 2028-03-31
- Completion
- 2028-07-31
- First posted
- 2024-04-04
- Last updated
- 2025-06-27
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Uganda
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06347146. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.