Rking Group, led by Dr. Gwadz, the PI of the HTH
Rking Group, led by Dr. Gwadz, the PI of the HTH study and Co-PI of the present study (with Dr. Linda Collins). The Intervention Working Group was made up of senior research scientists expert in AABH-PLWH, members of the target population, and experienced clinical interventionists, who applied these criteria in an iterative process usingThe Intervention Working Group identified five discrete intervention components for inclusion, as well as a preparatory Core intervention session to be conducted with all participants. Each component has two “levels” to be compared in the fractional factorial design: either yes/provided vs. no/not provided (Components A-D), or short version vs. long version (Component E). The five components selected for study are described below. The present study will be a definitive test of the efficacy of each component selected. Components will be guided by detailed manuals and will be culturally appropriate. Further, components will be individually tailored on substance use, mental health problems, and sexual minority status; manualized “algorithms” will be used to query or provide feedback (from baseline data) on these indices, followed by a series of prompts to guide the individually tailoring.Core intervention session ( 60 min)All participants will receive a foundational Core intervention session. The goals of this component are to: 1) foster engagement and build trust/relationships and 2) provide standard Nutlin-3a chiral web PubMed ID:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27906190 treatment education on the current U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommendations for frequency of HIV care appointments and timing of ART initiation [104, 105]. The primary theoretical target is HIV treatment knowledge.Component A: MI counseling sessions, 60?0 min each, 4 sessionsSessions will be conducted with participants individually and made up of discrete exercises. Each session will include 1? culturally based video narrative segments to highlight key issues and foster discussion [106, 107]. Session 1 addresses barriers to HIV care. Sessions 2 and 3 target barriers to ART (S2: evoking barriers, fostering readiness; S3: decisions, plans). Session 4 addresses adherence, individual barriers and their solutions in depth, and finalizing care/ART plans. This component’s primary theoretical targets are health beliefs (e.g., outcome expectancies, self-efficacy, medical distrust), and emotions (e.g., concerns/fears of ART).Component B: Pre-adherence preparation (2? wk. period)The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) provides guidelines for preparing PLWHNECTA for treatment success [108?10], an approach supported by the research literature [69, 105, 110?12]. Component B is grounded in the HRSA guidelines. Its goals are to prepare the physical and social “adherence environment,” put long-term ART supports in place, andGwadz et al. BMC Public Health (2017) 17:Page 6 ofbuild adherence skills. Component B is PubMed ID:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26240184 flexible and individualized and will first entail an in-person orientation home session (< 90 min) to assess readiness for ART, identify individual barriers to adherence prior to initiating ART (e.g., substance use), link adherence to daily activities to build habits, put educational and visual aids and reminders in place, understand side effects, identify and involve long-term supports/supporters who can reinforce successes, and plans to minimize lapses if doses are missed. With the participant's consent, the health care provider will be queried regarding the simplest dosing schedul.