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Computer Intervention for HIV/STI Risk and Drug Use During Pregnancy
The objective of this study is to develop and determine feasibility of a computer-delivered intervention (Health Check-up for Expectant Moms) approach to target women at risk for HIV or other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and alcohol/drug use during pregnancy through two phases of testing: The development aims of this study are to: 1. Develop intervention content. 2. Perform a small open trial (n = 10) of the computer based intervention (Health Check-up for Expectant Moms) to assess feasibility of recruitment of target population and acceptability of the intervention and study procedures via participant report of ease of use, helpfulness, and overall satisfaction. The pilot study aims of this study are to: 1. Conduct a randomized controlled pilot study in a sample of 50 high risk (at risk for HIV/STIs and alcohol/drug use) pregnant women. 2. Determine: 1. feasibility of the computer based intervention 2. acceptability via participant report of ease of use, helpfulness, and overall satisfaction 3. evidence for the hypothesized effects on outcomes: the proposed intervention, in comparison to a time-and-attention-matched control group, will produce reductions in HIV/STIs risk behavior during the follow-up assessment at 4 months. 3. Determine if the intervention condition, relative to control, will produce reductions in alcohol/drug use (frequency, quantity, and heavy drinking/use frequency). 4. Determine effects on process variables: if participants assigned to the intervention condition, relative to control, will demonstrate greater increases in knowledge, readiness to change and risk perceptions.
This R21 will assess a computer-delivered screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment (SBIRT) approach, the Health Check-up for Expectant Moms (HCEM), which will address barriers in early identification and intervention with women at risk for HIV/STI primarily, integrating substance use given the well-supported relationship between these risks during pregnancy. The study will accomplish these objectives by developing and pilot testing a tailored, motivationally enhanced HIV/STI and alcohol/drug use risk reduction intervention that incorporates motivational interviewing (MI) and is consistent with the Information-Motivation-Behavior model of HIV risk behavior. The HCEM is a computer-delivered, brief intervention (one 60-minute session, plus a 15-minute booster session within one month) that is theory-driven and derived from empirical support. The study consists of the following phases: during the Development Phase, the research team will adapt the software for the computer-delivered intervention and an open trial with 10 participants. During the Pilot Study Phase, we will conduct a two-group, randomized controlled study with a sample of 50 pregnant women endorsing HIV/STI and alcohol/drug use risk. Study procedures include the following: potential participants will complete a 10-minute computer-based screener, including questions about general health, alcohol and drug use, and sexual behavior. Inclusion criteria for participation in the study include pregnant women who endorse: 1) an unplanned pregnancy, 2) at least one unprotected vaginal (or anal) sex occasion (USO) in the past 30 days, and 3) current alcohol or drug use, or at risk for prenatal alcohol/drug use. Participants who meet criteria for the study based on the screener will be consented and complete the computer-delivered baseline assessment. Study participants will complete a 60-minute, computer-delivered intervention at baseline, and a 15-minute computer-delivered booster session within one month. Participants will be randomly assigned to either the HCEM (i.e., motivational interviewing-based brief intervention) or a time-and-attention-matched control group (i.e., a brief series of videos of television shows, with subsequent ratings of subjective preference). All participants will complete a computer-delivered, follow-up assessment at four months. Results of this program of research are expected to inform the development of integrated HIV/STI and alcohol/drug use interventions that are high-reaching and widely disseminable within prenatal care.
Age
18 - 50 years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No
Women and Infants Hospital
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Start Date
February 1, 2014
Primary Completion Date
July 1, 2016
Completion Date
July 1, 2016
Last Updated
December 12, 2018
50
ACTUAL participants
Health Check-Up for Expectant Moms
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Butler Hospital
Collaborators
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT07071623