TY - JOUR
T1 - Increasing drug users' adherence to HIV treatment
T2 - Results of a peer-driven intervention feasibility study
AU - Broadhead, Robert S.
AU - Heckathorn, Douglas D.
AU - Altice, Frederick L.
AU - Van Hulst, Yaël
AU - Carbone, Michael
AU - Friedland, Gerald H.
AU - O'Connor, Patrick G.
AU - Selwyn, Peter A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was partially supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (RO1 DA08014, RO1 DA12112) and the University of Connecticut Research Foundation. We thank our colleagues Steve Farber, Wayne Villemez, our present program staff of Health Educators, the many clinicians and pharmacists in the New Haven area who collaborate with us, our project officer at NIDA, Elizabeth Lambert, and the anonymous reviewers of this journal.
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - Active drug users with HIV infection suffer from both low utilization of, and adherence to, primary care. Combining drug treatment and primary care on-site reduces these problems significantly because it creates a social support structure; treatment program staffs can monitor patients' adherence and provide ongoing encouragement. But in the United States, only a very small minority of HIV+ drug users receive this demonstrably effective form of care. We report the results from a feasibility study of an alternative support structure, termed a "peer-driven intervention", that serves as a functional equivalent to drug treatment for increasing drug users' adherence to HIV therapeutics. The six-month study included 14 adult active drug users receiving medical care for HIV disease in New Haven, Connecticut. As a health advocate, each subject was assigned and asked to meet with another subject once a week at the project's storefront to provide peer support and counseling. As a peer, each subject was assigned and asked to meet with another health advocate once a week to receive support in keeping up his or her medical care. No two subjects played both roles for one another. Advocates earned nominal monetary rewards for eliciting positive responses from their peers in keeping clinical appointments, responding to physicians' referrals, picking up prescriptions on time and attending weekly meetings with the advocate. The results of the study suggest that an alternative social support structure to drug treatment is feasible for increasing active drug users' adherence to medical care. Innovative mechanisms that harness drug users' peer pressure to promote positive behavioral changes deserve greater study.
AB - Active drug users with HIV infection suffer from both low utilization of, and adherence to, primary care. Combining drug treatment and primary care on-site reduces these problems significantly because it creates a social support structure; treatment program staffs can monitor patients' adherence and provide ongoing encouragement. But in the United States, only a very small minority of HIV+ drug users receive this demonstrably effective form of care. We report the results from a feasibility study of an alternative support structure, termed a "peer-driven intervention", that serves as a functional equivalent to drug treatment for increasing drug users' adherence to HIV therapeutics. The six-month study included 14 adult active drug users receiving medical care for HIV disease in New Haven, Connecticut. As a health advocate, each subject was assigned and asked to meet with another subject once a week at the project's storefront to provide peer support and counseling. As a peer, each subject was assigned and asked to meet with another health advocate once a week to receive support in keeping up his or her medical care. No two subjects played both roles for one another. Advocates earned nominal monetary rewards for eliciting positive responses from their peers in keeping clinical appointments, responding to physicians' referrals, picking up prescriptions on time and attending weekly meetings with the advocate. The results of the study suggest that an alternative social support structure to drug treatment is feasible for increasing active drug users' adherence to medical care. Innovative mechanisms that harness drug users' peer pressure to promote positive behavioral changes deserve greater study.
KW - Adherence
KW - Antiretroviral therapy
KW - HIV/AIDS
KW - Health care utilization
KW - Injecting drug users
KW - Intervention
KW - Social supports
KW - Substance abuse
KW - USA
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U2 - 10.1016/S0277-9536(01)00167-8
DO - 10.1016/S0277-9536(01)00167-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 12144138
AN - SCOPUS:0036281388
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 55
SP - 235
EP - 246
JO - Ethics in Science and Medicine
JF - Ethics in Science and Medicine
IS - 2
ER -