Trials / Active Not Recruiting
Active Not RecruitingNCT06358885
IGHID 12230 - An Implementation Trial of an Experiential Brief Alcohol Intervention for HIV Prevention
IGHID 12230 - Scaling up the Brief Alcohol Intervention to Prevent HIV Infection in Vietnam: a Cluster Randomized, Implementation Trial (EBAI)
- Status
- Active Not Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 3,234 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
This study is a hybrid type 3, cluster randomized implementation trial to examine effective strategies to scale up the Brief Alcohol Intervention (BAI) in ART clinics in Vietnam. One arm will receive only facilitation for BAI implementation. Facilitation is a flexible strategy that helps clinics to address common barriers, such as counselor skills, competing priorities, and resource deficits. In the other arm, in addition to facilitation, clinic staff, irrespective of their own alcohol use, will be offered the BAI themselves as experiential learning (EBAI) to address their own alcohol-related attitudes and behaviors. Clinic staff responsible for delivering the BAI to patients will also be offered 3 consolidation activities to integrate their own experiences with their delivery of the BAI.
Detailed description
In this cluster-randomized controlled, hybrid type 3 implementation trial, investigators will assess two approaches to the brief alcohol intervention (BAI) scale-up. The BAI is an evidence-based intervention to address unhealthy alcohol use that comprises 2 in-person sessions and 2 booster telephone sessions. Face-to-face 45-minute sessions occur \~1 month apart; 10-minute telephone sessions occur 2 to 3 weeks after each face-to-face session. Investigators chose a hybrid type 3 design to evaluate implementation outcomes, while simultaneously ensuring that effectiveness outcomes, specifically viral suppression, are achieved. Investigators will compare facilitation (FAC) versus EBAI+FAC in 30 ART clinics in Vietnam. The FAC arm, the comparison arm, will use internal and external facilitators to help clinics and staff address common barriers to BAI implementation. Facilitation typically works through interactive problem solving and support. In the EBAI+FAC arm, clinic staff, defined as clinic directors, physicians, nurses, and counselors, will be offered the experiential BAI (EBAI), regardless of their own alcohol use, prior to BAI implementation, and clinic staff responsible for delivering the BAI to patients will also be offered 3 additional consolidation opportunities to integrate their own experiences with their delivery of the BAI to PWH. Randomization will be 1:1 with 15 clinics per arm. Clinics will be assessed pre-training for key contextual factors, related to clinic characteristics and clinic staff. Upon trial initiation, persons with HIV (PWH) initiating or on ART will be screened for unhealthy alcohol use with the AUDIT-C (Time 0). Those PWH who screen positive for unhealthy alcohol use will be offered the BAI by trained clinic counselors. PWH who do not screen positive will continue to be screened with the AUDIT-C at routine ART clinic visits. PWH who screen positive but refuse to participate in the trial or are excluded due to alcohol withdrawal symptoms will continue to be screened with the AUDIT-C at every routine ART clinic visit per standard clinic procedures. PWH may decline AUDIT screening when it is offered. Implementation and effectiveness outcomes will be evaluated to 12 or 24 months (Aim 1). After the 12- month assessments, mechanisms underlying successful implementation in both arms will be explored using qualitative and quantitative methods (Aim 2). Investigators will explore the effect of implementing the BAI (both arms) and experiencing the BAI (EBAI+FAC arm) on staff members' alcohol use and attitudes toward alcohol and BAI (Aim 3).
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Facilitation (FAC) | The facilitation approach will use a flexible clinic level implementation strategy that helps clinics to address common barriers, such as counselor skills, competing priorities, and resource deficits. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Experiential Brief Alcohol Intervention (EBAI) | Clinic staff will be offered the experiential BAI prior to implementation. The BAI comprises 2 in-person sessions and 2 booster phone sessions. Clinic staff responsible for delivering the BAI to PWH participants will be offered 3 additional consolidation sessions to integrate their experiences receiving the BAI with their delivery of the BAI. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-04-25
- Primary completion
- 2026-11-01
- Completion
- 2026-11-01
- First posted
- 2024-04-11
- Last updated
- 2025-12-30
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Vietnam
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06358885. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.