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A Structural Intervention to Promote Women's Health
*A Structural Intervention to Integrate Reproductive Health into HIV Care
*Love, Marriage, and HIV: Gender and HIV Risk
Distribution of Resources and Gendered Power
Drug Abuse Clinical Trials Network: NY/Long Island Region
*Anal Sex Practices among South African Women and Men 
*Female Condom Promotion among South African Students
Health-Related Interventions for Persons Living with HIV
HIV Risk Among Migrant Entertainment Industry Workers in Eastern China 
HIV/STI Prevention for Drug-Involved Couples
Increasing Dual Protection among Low-Income Minority Women
STD/HIV Risk Reduction for African American Couples
*Training Service Providers in Dual Protection Counseling in China
* denotes international research

 

GENDER-SPECIFIC INTERVENTIONS FOR WOMEN AND THEIR MALE PARTNERS

Grant Title: A Structural Intervention to Integrate Reproductive Health into HIV Care

Funding Source and Project Period: NIMH, R01; 2006-2011

HIV Center Key Personnel:

Principal Investigator: Joanne Mantell, Ph.D.
Co-Principal Investigators: Theresa Exner, Ph.D.; Susie Hoffman, Ph.D.
Co-Investigator: Zena Stein, M.B., B.Ch.

Project Overview
(from abstract submitted to NIMH):

In South Africa, neither general medical nor HIV-specific treatment practices routinely address issues of discordant/untested partners or the concurrent HIV protection needs and fertility goals of those who are HIV-positive. Women infected with HIV have insufficient information about contraception and parenting options, and these needs are inadequately addressed among HIV-positive men. Regardless of societal or personal attitudes about the soundness of HIV-positive persons seeking conception, our pilot data from two Cape Town clinics show that nearly 50% of recently diagnosed HIV-positive women and men accessing HIV care for the first time are seeking or desirous of having children in the next year. A multi-level structural intervention that simultaneously addresses stigma and poor access to contraceptive services and introduces best-practices counseling approaches that maximize sexual risk reduction based on clients' personal situations is urgently needed.

In this study, we will (1) conduct formative research with key stakeholders to inform the development of a multi-level structural intervention to integrate sexual and reproductive health services into HIV clinical care; (2) develop a standardized counseling algorithm and decision-making tool that tailors safer sex, contraception, and fertility messages to HIV-positive individuals' circumstances; and (3) develop, implement, and evaluate the efficacy of a proof-of-concept, multi-level structural intervention that integrates reproductive health services into HIV care for HIV-positive women and men. The primary outcome at the level of Clinics will be a comparison of changes in the clinic environment and staff attitudes and behaviors regarding the reproductive health of HIV-positive persons as perceived by both staff and clients. The primary outcome at the level of Clients among those who wish to avoid childbearing is success in achieving this aim as measured by an algorithm we will develop that will allow us to establish a binary outcome that accounts for the heterogeneity of situations and goals. Among clients who are open to the possibility of childbearing, the "appropriate" outcome will be determined based on a consensus process. Ensuring access to effective contraception, including condoms, is potentially cost-effective as it could reduce unintended pregnancies and maternal morbidity and mortality as well as avert HIV infections in partners and infants at a lower cost than caring for an infected person. If our proof-of-concept (Phase II) trial suggests efficacy, the intervention has the potential for being readily incorporated into the Cape Town metropolitan public health infrastructure and HIV care systems in other countries with emerging AIDS epidemics.

Update: 5/2/07

HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies
1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 15, New York, NY 10032
(212) 543-5969 | Fax (212) 543-6003