Siyakhana: A hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation stepped-wedge trial to reduce stigma towards substance use and depression among community health workers in HIV/TB care in South Africa

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Jessica F. Magidson , Kristen S. Regenauer , Kim Johnson , Tianzhou Ma , Jennifer M. Belus , Alexandra L. Rose , Imani Brown , Nonceba Ciya , Sibabalwe Ndamase , Caroline Sacko , John Joska , Goodman Sibeko , Ingrid V. Bassett , Bronwyn Myers
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Substance use (SU) and other mental health conditions, such as depression, contribute to poor engagement in HIV and TB care in South Africa, a country with the highest global prevalence of HIV and a significant TB burden. Yet, community health workers (CHWs)—frontline lay health workers who play a central role in re-engaging patients in HIV/TB care—receive little-to-no training on supporting patients with SU or other mental health concerns. CHWs also display stigma towards patients with SU and depression, which may contribute to HIV/TB care disengagement. We developed and tested a CHW training (“Siyakhana”) to reduce CHW stigma towards SU and depression in HIV/TB care.

Methods

A cluster randomized, stepped-wedge hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation trial (N = 82 CHWs) evaluated Siyakhana across six clinics in a low-resource area of Cape Town, SA. The three-day Siyakhana training included psychoeducation, self-care strategies, non-judgmental communication, problem solving, and contact-based stigma reduction using lived experience narratives. Pre-training and three- and six-month post-training assessments were conducted. Primary effectiveness outcomes were CHW stigma towards SU and depression, assessed using the Social Distance Scale. Primary implementation outcomes were guided by Proctor's model, including fidelity, acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility, assessed using structured coding of role plays and a validated quantitative measure for assessing implementation outcomes in low- and middle-income countries.

Results

Participants were on average 46.8 years old (SD = 8.9), 99% female, and 100% Black African. Ninety-five percent of CHWs completed the Siyakhana training, with approximately 90% retention over six months. A linear mixed effects model showed a significant effect of the Siyakhana training on reducing SU stigma over six months after adjusting for time (β = −1.46, SE = 0.67, p < 0.05), but no effect on depression stigma (β = −0.20, SE = 0.57, p > 0.05). CHW fidelity was 89.4% (SD = 11.3%) at six-months. Quantitative implementation outcomes indicated high acceptability (M = 2.85, SD = 0.27), appropriateness (M = 2.77, SD = 0.31), and feasibility (M = 2.41, SD = 0.38).

Conclusions

Siyakhana was associated with reductions in CHW SU stigma in the context of HIV/TB care, with promising implementation outcomes. Findings will inform a larger randomized trial evaluating the effectiveness and implementation of Siyakhana and examine whether shifting CHW stigma improves patient-level health outcomes.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05282173. Registered on 7 March 2022.
Siyakhana:南非艾滋病毒/结核病治疗社区卫生工作者对药物使用的污名和抑郁的一项混合型有效性实施分步楔形试验。
药物使用(SU)和其他精神健康状况,如抑郁症,导致南非参与艾滋病毒和结核病治疗的情况不佳,南非是全球艾滋病毒患病率最高和结核病负担最重的国家。然而,社区卫生工作者(CHWs)——在使患者重新参与艾滋病毒/结核病治疗方面发挥核心作用的一线非专业卫生工作者——在支持患有苏苏症或其他精神卫生问题的患者方面几乎没有接受过培训。卫生保健工作者也对患有SU和抑郁症的患者表现出耻辱感,这可能导致艾滋病毒/结核病护理脱离参与。我们开发并测试了CHW培训(“Siyakhana”),以减少CHW对SU的耻辱感和艾滋病毒/结核病治疗中的抑郁情绪。方法:在南非开普敦低资源地区的6家诊所中,采用集群随机、楔形步进混合2型有效性实施试验(N = 82名CHWs)评估Siyakhana。为期三天的Siyakhana培训包括心理教育、自我护理策略、非判断性沟通、解决问题以及使用生活经历叙事减少基于接触的耻辱。进行了培训前和培训后3个月和6个月的评估。使用社会距离量表评估的主要有效性结果是CHW对SU的耻辱感和抑郁症。主要实施结果以Proctor模型为指导,包括保真度、可接受性、适当性和可行性,使用角色扮演的结构化编码和用于评估低收入和中等收入国家实施结果的经过验证的定量措施进行评估。结果:参与者平均46.8 岁(SD = 8.9),99% %为女性,100% %为非洲黑人。95%的chw完成了Siyakhana培训,六个月的保留率约为90% %。线性混合效应模型显示,经时间调整后6个月,Siyakhana训练对减轻SU病耻感有显著效果(β = -1.46,SE = 0.67,p  0.05)。六个月时CHW保真度为89.4% % (SD = 11.3 %)。量化实现结果表明高可接受性(M = 2.85,SD = 0.27),适当性(M = 2.77,SD = 0.31),和可行性(M = 2.41,SD = 0.38)。结论:Siyakhana与艾滋病毒/结核病治疗背景下CHW SU耻辱感的减少有关,具有良好的实施结果。研究结果将为更大规模的随机试验提供信息,评估Siyakhana的有效性和实施情况,并检查改变CHW耻辱感是否能改善患者水平的健康结果。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05282173。2022年3月7日注册
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来源期刊
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment Biological Psychiatry, Neuroscience (General), Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General)
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