Impact of harmreductioncare in HIVclinicalsettings on stigma and healthoutcomes for PLWHwhousedrugs
Project Number5R01DA054832-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderHAWK, MARY ELIZABETH Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary
People living with HIV (PLWH) whousedrugs are among the most vulnerable in the HIV continuum of care,
exhibiting low rates of retention in care and poor clinicaloutcomes. HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) often co-occur
due to shared vulnerabilities and routes of transmission including injection drug use, which is also associated
with risk for opioid overdose. PLWHwhousedrugs experience anticipated and enacted stigma in healthcaresettings, which contribute to poor clinicaloutcomes. Harmreduction (HR) is an approach that aims to reduce
the negative effects of risky health behaviors without necessarily eliminating them completely and is an
effective way of engaging people whousedrugs into care. Though often thought of as structural approaches,
such as syringe services, harmreduction is also a relational approach to care that focuses on non-punitive,
autonomy-building relationships between patients and providers. This R01 will explore the degree to which
structural and relational HR approaches to care buffer experiences of stigma for PLWHwhousedrugs in HIV
primary caresettings and improve the quality of patient-provider relationships as well as clinicaloutcomes. The
study will explore healthcare providers' attitudes towards working with PLWHwhousedrugs and the ways
these relate to their acceptance and practice of structural and relational HR. This will be accomplished via web-
based surveys (n=125) and qualitative interviews (n=20) with healthcare providers in Pittsburgh, PA and
Birmingham, AL. These methods will utilize a multi-level lens, engaging multiple provider types, such as social
workers, nurses, and physicians working in HIV primary care teams. Using an intersectionality framework, the
study will also assess the degree to which patients' perceptions of their HIV providers' HR care are associated
with anticipated and enacted stigma in HIV primary caresettings and with clinicaloutcomes. Data will be
collected by surveying PLWHwhousedrugs (n=500) to explore if structural and relational HR mitigate stigma,
improve the patient-provider relationship, and ultimately improve clinicaloutcomes as measured via electronic
health records data including HIV viral load, retention in HIV primary care, HCV sustained virologic response,
medication adherence, and retention in care for Medications for Opioid Use Disorder and/or in behavioral
health treatment for substance use disorder. Study methods will include an evaluation of the psychometric
properties of the Patient Assessment of Providers HarmReduction Scale (PAPHRS), a novel scale to measure
relational HR care. Finally, the study will apply human-centered design approaches to engage stakeholders in
reviewing findings from providers' and patients' experiences of HR care to develop an intervention to
operationalize HR care in HIV primary caresettings. A preliminary exploration of the feasibility, acceptability,
and appropriateness of the newly-developed intervention will be conducted with HIV providers. Ultimately this
research trajectory aims to improve adherence to care and health disparities for PLWHwhousedrugs.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
People living with HIV (PLWH) whousedrugs experience significant health disparities including lower rates of
retention in HIVcare and higher rates of unsuppressed viral load, resulting in secondary infections and
increased mortality. The proposed study will used mixed methods to explore (a) providers’ attitudes towards
working with PLWHwhousedrugs as well as their preparedness for delivering harmreductioncare; (b)
patients’ experiences of stigma in healthcaresettings, viewed from an intersectionality framework; and (c) the
extent to which structural and relational harmreductioncare buffer the effects of stigma in HIV primary caresettings, contributing to improved clinicaloutcomes. The study will also use these findings to inform the
development of an intervention to operationalize harmreduction in healthcaresettings, using stakeholder-
engaged and human-centered design approaches, presenting a novel path to reducing HIVhealth inequities
for PLWHwhousedrugs.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AdherenceAffectAreaAttitudeBehaviorBuffersBuprenorphineCaringCharacteristicsClinicClinicalContinuity of Patient CareDataDrug usageDrug userElectronic Health RecordEvaluationExclusionExhibitsHIVHIV/HCVHarmReductionHealthHealth PersonnelHealth behaviorHepatitis CHepatitis C IncidenceHepatitis C co-infectionInfectionInjecting drug userInterventionInterviewLiteratureMeasuresMedical Care TeamMethodsModelingNIH Office of AIDS ResearchNeedle-Exchange ProgramsNursesOnline SystemsOrganizational PolicyOutcomePathway interactionsPatientsPerceptionPersonsPhysiciansPoliciesPopulationPreventionPrimary CarePropertyProviderPsychometricsReadinessResearchRiskRouteSelf EfficacyServicesSeveritiesSocial WorkersStigmatizationStructureSubstance Use DisorderSurveysSyringesTestingViralViral Load resultVisitWorkacceptability and feasibilityantiretroviral therapybehavioral healthefficacy/implementation trialempowermentexperiencehealthcaresettingshealth disparityhealth inequalitieshuman centered designimprovedimproved outcomeinfection rateinjection drug useintersectionalitylensmedication compliancemedication for opioid use disordermembermortalitymultidisciplinarynovelopioid overdoseorganizational structurepatient engagementprimary care settingprimary care teamresponseretention ratesecondary infectionsocialsocial stigmasubstance usesubstance use treatmenttherapy adherencetherapy developmenttransmission process
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01DA054832-04
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