适应力干预适用于老年艾滋病毒感染者的随机对照试验方案:适应力干预成功促进衰老(RISE+)。

IF 0.8 Q4 NURSING
Nursing-Research and Reviews Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-08-27 DOI:10.2147/nrr.s538597
Pariya L Fazeli, David E Vance, Jeremy D Delgadillo, Shakaye R Haase, Crystal Chapman Lambert, Brittany L Bradley, Andres Azuero, Bulent Turan, Mirjam Colette Kempf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:尽管有证据表明:1)老年艾滋病毒感染者(PLHIV)承受着沉重的压力负担,这与无数较差的结果有关;2)老年PLHIV患者的心理弹性可能缓冲压力的负面影响;3)老年PLHIV患者的这种保护因子水平可能低于血清阴性患者,但研究增强老年PLHIV患者恢复力的策略的工作很少。本文详细介绍了一项试点临床试验的方案,该试验检查了理论驱动的恢复力干预的可行性和有效性,该干预已适用于老年PLHIV。患者和方法:本研究计划将100名年龄在45岁以上且HIV治疗管理不理想的老年PLHIV随机分配到干预条件(即,Resilience intervention for Successful Aging Enhancement [RISE+])或注意匹配的对照条件。两种方法都包括每周一小时的个人小组干预会议。综合评估包括近端机制措施(即通过经验抽样法[ESM]短信提示在线调查实时测量复原力资源和应激反应及恢复情况)和健康措施(即心理功能和艾滋病毒结果)。主要目标侧重于干预对以下方面的影响:恢复力资源的使用,以及这种增加是否会改善情感应激反应和恢复(目标1)以及三个月时的远端健康结果(目标2)。结论:本研究在老年PLHIV患者中测试了一种新的弹性干预措施,它有几个优势,包括关注高危人群和研究不足的人群,严格检查疗效和机制,以及利用最少的促进者参与的干预措施,这对未来的可扩展性有影响。研究结果将确定干预机制,并为开发有效和可扩展的干预措施提供信息,以增强老年艾滋病毒携带者和其他不同老年人群体的恢复力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Protocol for a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of a Resilience Intervention Adapted for Older People Living with HIV: Resilience Intervention for Successful Aging Enhancement (RISE+).

Purpose: Despite evidence that: 1) older people living with HIV (PLHIV) experience a high burden of stress that is associated with myriad poorer outcomes, 2) psychological resilience may buffer the negative effects of stress in older PLHIV, and 3) older PLHIV may possess lower levels of this protective factor than seronegative counterparts, little work has examined strategies to bolster resilience in older PLHIV. This article details the protocol for a pilot clinical trial examining the feasibility and efficacy of a theory-driven resilience intervention that has been adapted for older PLHIV.

Patients and methods: This study plans to randomize 100 older PLHIV aged 45+ with suboptimal HIV treatment management to either an intervention condition (i.e., Resilience Intervention for Successful Aging Enhancement [RISE+]) or an attention-matched control condition. Both arms include weekly one-hour in person group intervention sessions. The comprehensive assessment includes proximal mechanistic measures, (i.e., real-time measurement of resilience resources and stress reactivity and recovery via experience sampling method [ESM] text message-prompted online surveys) and health (i.e., psychological functioning and HIV outcomes) measures. Primary Aims focus on intervention effects on: the use of resilience resources and whether such increases drive improved affective stress reactivity and recovery (Aim 1) and distal health outcomes at three months (Aim 2).

Conclusions: This study tests a novel resilience intervention among older PLHIV and has several strengths, including focusing on an at-risk and understudied population, rigorous examination of efficacy and mechanism, and utilizing an intervention with minimal facilitator involvement, which has implications for future scalability. Findings will identify intervention mechanisms and inform the development of potent and scalable interventions for building resilience in older PLHIV and other diverse populations of older adults.

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