Strengthening community responses to economic vulnerability and HIV inequities
Project Number5R34MH130207-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderGAMAREL, KRISTI E Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBOR
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT
In the United States, transgender women of color (`trans women of color') experience cyclical, interlocking
systems of structural and institutional oppression rooted in racism and transphobia, which fuel economic
vulnerability. Together, cycles of intersecting racism, transphobia, and economic vulnerability create conditions
that give rise to extreme HIV inequities among trans women of color. Microeconomic interventions – designed
to improve financial standing by increasing income generation and access to financial resources through
entrepreneurship, cash transfers, and training — have the potential to address structural factors underlying HIV
risk. Over the past few years, several trans-led organizations, including the Trans Sistas of Color Project, have
integrated microeconomic strategies, specifically emergency assistance (i.e., unconditional cash grants) into
their programming. Building on our formative work in Detroit, this project seeks to adapt and examine the
acceptability and feasibility of an enhanced microeconomic intervention designed to address HIV prevention
and care continua outcomes. The enhanced microeconomic intervention builds on our community partner's
existing microeconomic interventions, which includes: (1) an emergency assistance; and (2) peer and legal
support to obtain legal gender affirmation (i.e., legal name and gender markers on identification documents).
The existing intervention will be enhanced to include (1) weekly educational sessions on economic
empowerment (i.e., job acquisition, income generation through micro-business, and financial literacy) and HIV
prevention and care; (2) employment-focused mentoring; (3) weekly social media posts of job openings in
Detroit; and (4) an unconditional grant ($1,200) for use towards acquiring self-led or formal employment. Our
community advisory board composed of trans women of color will provide ongoing consultation. The proposed
research plan is directly in line with the prioritization of sexual and gender minority communities for health
disparities research and the Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) initiative, as well as NIH priority areas for
reducing HIV incidence. Findings will provide the necessary groundwork to examine intervention efficacy and
implementation processes in a future, large-scale trial.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE STATEMENT
Transgender women of color experience systemic racism and transphobia, which contributes economic
vulnerability and HIV inequities. The proposed R34 application seeks to adapt and evaluate the feasibility and
acceptability of a microeconomic intervention designed with and for transgender women of color to improve
HIV prevention and care continua outcomes. The proposed approach will provide the necessary groundwork
for an efficacy trial in a future, large-scale randomized controlled trial.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AIDS preventionAddressAdherenceAreaBenchmarkingBlack raceBlack, Indigenous, People of ColorBusinessesCaringColorCommunitiesConsultationsContinuity of Patient CareDataData CollectionEconomicsEducationEmergency SituationEmploymentEnsureEntrepreneurshipEpidemicFundingFutureGenderGenerationsGoalsGrantHIVHIV disparitiesHIV riskHealth Disparities ResearchHealth PersonnelHomelessnessHousingHuman immunodeficiency virus testIncidenceIncomeIndigenousInequityInstitutionInstitutional RacismInterventionInterviewLatinaLegalManualsMeasuresMentorsMichiganModelingNamesOccupationsOutcomeParticipantPersonsPhasePovertyPrevalencePublic HealthRaceRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsReportingResearchResourcesRespondentSexual and Gender MinoritiesSurveysSystemTrainingTreatment EfficacyUnited StatesUnited States National Institutes of HealthViralWorkacceptability and feasibilityagedantiretroviral therapyarmcare outcomescisgendercommunity advisory boardcommunity partnerscommunity-centeredcomparison interventionefficacy trialempowermentepidemic preparednessethnic disparityexperiencefinancial literacyfollow-upfood insecuritygender affirmationgender minority communityhousing instabilityimplementation processimprovedinformation gatheringintervention refinementpeerpilot testpost interventionpre-exposure prophylaxisprogramspublic health relevanceracismrecruitresponseretention ratesocial mediasocial structurestructural determinantstherapy designtransgender womentransphobiatreatment as usualuptakewomen of color
No Sub Projects information available for 5R34MH130207-03
Publications
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Patents
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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History
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