Reduction of Drug Use and HIV Risk Among Out-of-Treatment Methamphetamine Users
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Infectious Disease, HIV / AIDS |
Therapuetic Areas: | Immunology / Infectious Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - Any |
Updated: | 4/21/2016 |
Start Date: | August 2010 |
End Date: | December 2016 |
Contact: | Karen F Corsi, ScD, MPH |
Email: | karen.corsi@ucdenver.edu |
Phone: | 720-942-1804 |
There is a need to identify and test effective strategies to reduce meth use and HIV risk
behaviors in heterosexuals. This project will compare the efficacy of a manually-driven HIV
testing and counseling (HIV T/C) intervention, with HIV T/C plus a manualized Contingency
Management (CM), with HIV T/C plus CM plus a manualized Strengths-Based Case Management
(CM/SBCM) model. As HIV T/C is the standard of care, the investigators are testing to
determine if the investigators can enhance this standard. The specific aims and hypotheses
of this protocol are:
1. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on reducing drug use,
specifically meth use. Hypothesis 1: CM/SBCM will reduce drug use more than those in CM
(which will have more reduction than HIV T/C), potentially mediated through increased
service utilization.
2. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on reducing HIV and STI
risk behaviors, specifically sex risk behaviors but also needle risk for injection drug
users (IDUs). Hypothesis 2: CM/SBCM will have greater decreases in HIV risk behaviors
than those in CM (which will have greater decreases than HIV T/C), potentially mediated
through reduced drug use.
3. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on improving mental
health status. Hypothesis 3: CM/SBCM will have greater improvements in mental health
status than those in CM (which will have greater improvements than HIV T/C),
potentially mediated through increased service utilization and reduction of drug use,
and potentially moderated by baseline meth use.
behaviors in heterosexuals. This project will compare the efficacy of a manually-driven HIV
testing and counseling (HIV T/C) intervention, with HIV T/C plus a manualized Contingency
Management (CM), with HIV T/C plus CM plus a manualized Strengths-Based Case Management
(CM/SBCM) model. As HIV T/C is the standard of care, the investigators are testing to
determine if the investigators can enhance this standard. The specific aims and hypotheses
of this protocol are:
1. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on reducing drug use,
specifically meth use. Hypothesis 1: CM/SBCM will reduce drug use more than those in CM
(which will have more reduction than HIV T/C), potentially mediated through increased
service utilization.
2. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on reducing HIV and STI
risk behaviors, specifically sex risk behaviors but also needle risk for injection drug
users (IDUs). Hypothesis 2: CM/SBCM will have greater decreases in HIV risk behaviors
than those in CM (which will have greater decreases than HIV T/C), potentially mediated
through reduced drug use.
3. To compare the relative efficacy of HIV T/C vs. CM vs. CM/SBCM on improving mental
health status. Hypothesis 3: CM/SBCM will have greater improvements in mental health
status than those in CM (which will have greater improvements than HIV T/C),
potentially mediated through increased service utilization and reduction of drug use,
and potentially moderated by baseline meth use.
Inclusion Criteria:
- 18 years of age or older
- Be competent (not too intoxicated or mentally disabled) to give informed consent at
the time of the interview
- Meth use (verified through urine drug screening and a self-report of meth use of at
least 4 times per month for the last 3 months)
- Self-reported sex with someone of the opposite sex in last 30 days
- Ability to provide a reliable address and phone number for contact
- Not in drug treatment in the past 30 days
- Willingness to be tested for HIV at baseline and follow-up
- Not transient and no know reason why he/she will not be available for follow-up
interviews
- Not currently mandated by the criminal justice system to receive treatment based on
self-report.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Participation in drug treatment in the past 30 days
- Currently participating in another Project Safe study
- Pregnant or attempting to become pregnant
- Intoxicated or impaired mentally to the point that they cannot voluntarily consent to
participate tin the project and/or respond to the interview
We found this trial at
1
site
Denver, Colorado 80205
Principal Investigator: Karen F Corsi, ScD, MPH
Phone: 720-942-1805
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