N/A
N=500
Expanding HIV Testing Among Uganda Adults Who Utilize Traditional Healers
HIV/AIDS · Health Behaviors
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03718871 ↗Enrolled (actual)
500
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Mar 2021
Primary outcome: Primary: Number of TH Clients Who Received HIV Testing — 57; 250 Participants — p=<0.001
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- HIV testing at traditional healer practices (Behavioral)
- Age
- Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- Weill Medical College of Cornell University
- Primary completion
- May 2020
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Number of TH Clients Who Received HIV Testing |
57; 250 | <0.001 sig |
| SECONDARY Number of New HIV Diagnoses Among TH Clients |
0; 10 | 0.002 sig |
| SECONDARY Number of Patients With +HIV Test Who Successfully Link to HIV Care |
0; 7 | 0.015 sig |
| SECONDARY Age in Years of Control Arm Subjects Who Received an HIV Test |
30 | <0.01 sig |
| SECONDARY Gender of Control Arm Subjects Who Received an HIV Test |
17; 40 | 0.07 |
| SECONDARY Highest Level of Education for Control Arm Subjects Who Received an HIV Test |
30; 27 | 0.09 |
Summary
HIV antiretroviral therapy has the potential to dramatically decrease HIV transmission worldwide1; yet, a barrier to ending the AIDS epidemic in low-resource settings is the fact that healthcare is largely provided by traditional or spiritual healers rather than biomedical providers, and there are no strategies in place to identify HIV-infected patients among Traditional Healer patients and link them to HIV care. In order to reach the UNAIDS 90-90-90 benchmarks HIV services must reach marginalized populations in endemic regions, such as in southwestern Uganda. Uganda is one of seven sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries accounting for 90% of all new HIV infections in this region6. HIV prevalence is 7.3%, with ~1.5 million people living with HIV/AIDS and 99,000 new infections in 2014. However, only 50% of sexually active Ugandans have ever tested for HIV8. In the project location of southwestern Uganda, like much of SSA, the majority of Ugandans utilize Traditional Healers (TH), but little is known about Traditional Healer practices or rates of HIV testing (or HIV infection) among their clients. Specific aims of this study are to: 1) identify key socio-structural factors that frame HIV testing behaviors among Ugandan adults who utilize Traditional Healers; 2) investigate acceptability of providing point-of-care HIV testing at Traditional Healer practice locations; and 3) develop and pilot a prospective HIV testing intervention among Traditional Healer patients to promote earlier diagnosis. Results will be used to implement subsequent, large-scale cluster-randomized HIV testing intervention at Traditional Healer practice locations. Findings from the proposed study include formative data on populations that utilize Traditional Healers in an HIV-endemic region of Uganda, and pilot testing of an HIV testing intervention at healer practice locations; these results could be applied towards expanding HIV testing in other low-resource, endemic settings.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- 18 year of age or older
- able to provide informed consent
- not known to be HIV infected
- willing to be contacted at 3 months following enrollment
- willing to complete an exit survey after 3 months
Exclusion Criteria
- being under the age of 18 years
- incapable of giving informed consent
- previously being diagnosed with HIV
- being unwilling to receive HIV test results
- unwilling to participate in the testing intervention
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03718871). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.