Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of an Intervention to Improve Coping with Intersectional Stigma and Medication Adherence Among HIV-Positive Latinx Sexual Minority Men

被引:0
作者
Laura M. Bogart
Joanna L. Barreras
Ana Gonzalez
David J. Klein
Terry Marsh
Denis Agniel
David W. Pantalone
机构
[1] RAND Corporation,
[2] Bienestar Human Services Inc,undefined
[3] California State University Long Beach,undefined
[4] University of Massachusetts Boston,undefined
[5] The Fenway Institute,undefined
[6] Fenway Health,undefined
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2021年 / 25卷
关键词
Coping; HIV; Latinx; Sexual minority men; Stigma/discrimination;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We developed and pilot-tested an eight-session community-based cognitive behavior therapy group intervention to improve coping with intersectional stigma, address medical mistrust, and improve antiretroviral treatment adherence. Seventy-six HIV-positive Latinx sexual minority men (SMM; 38 intervention, 38 wait-list control) completed surveys at baseline, and 4- and 7-months post-baseline. Adherence was electronically monitored. Intention-to-treat, repeated-measures regressions showed improved adherence in the intervention vs. control group from baseline to follow-up [electronically monitored: b (95% CI) 9.24 (− 0.55, 19.03), p = 0.06; self-reported: b (95% CI) 4.50 (0.70, 8.30), p = .02]. Intervention participants showed marginally decreased negative religious coping beliefs in response to stigma [b (95% CI) = − 0.18 (− 0.37, 0.01), p = .06], and significantly lower medical mistrust [b (95% CI) = − 0.47 (− 0.84, − 0.09), p = .02]. Our intervention holds promise for improving HIV outcomes by empowering Latinx SMM to leverage innate resilience resources when faced with stigma.
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页码:1647 / 1660
页数:13
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