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Enhancing Community Participation in HIV Prevention Research

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Enhancing Community Participation in HIV Prevention Research Steve Morin, Ph.D. AIDS Policy Research Center AIDS Research Institute University of California, San ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Enhancing Community Participation in HIV Prevention Research


1
Enhancing Community Participation in HIV
Prevention Research
  • Steve Morin, Ph.D.
  • AIDS Policy Research Center
  • AIDS Research Institute
  • University of California, San Francisco

2
UCSF Research Team
  • Stephen F. Morin
  • T. Anne Richards
  • Andre Maiorana
  • Marisa McLaughlin
  • Nicolas Sheon
  • Kimberly Koester
  • Karen Vernon
  • Sheri Storey
  • Andrew Herring

3
Acknowledgements
  • Community Working
  • Group Co-Chairs
  • Janet Frohlich
  • Mike Shriver

Family Health International Stella
Kirkendale Wayne Wilson
4
Specific Aims
  • To assess the views of CAB and research team
    members regarding community consultation in HIV
    research
  • To assess motivation and barriers to
    participation in prevention trials

5
Background
  • Community Advisory Boards (CABs) in AIDS research
    have their roots in AIDS activism
  • AZT trial in 1987 pointed to need for partnership
    with community
  • Educated and desperate people with HIV organize
    to demand a seat at the table

6
NIH History of CABs
  • Community Constituency Group formed
  • NIH guidance to AIDS clinical trials units to
    establish local CABs
  • Role -- to provide advice and communicate
    community preferences
  • With HIVNET, CABs go international
  • HPTN continues emphasis on community participation

7
Questions
  • Do CABs work.
  • In the absence of organized activists?
  • In prevention trials v. treatment trials?

8
Rapid Assessment
  • Goal is a preliminary, qualitative understanding
  • Field teams visit for five days to get picture at
    one point in time
  • Triangulation of data sources
  • secondary reports
  • ethnographic observations
  • semi-structured interviews

9
Site Interviews
10
Sites
Rapid Assessment - 6 month snapshot
11
Data Analysis
  • Interviews transcribed
  • Data entered into Ethnograph
  • Reviewed for broad themes and subthemes
  • Codes assigned and verified
  • Summaries and cross-site analysis

12
Conflicting World Views
  • Researchers
  • Scientific questions
  • Randomized trials
  • Recruitment/retention
  • Community
  • Participants
  • Basic life needs
  • Medical care
  • HIV STD screening
  • Research

13
World View
14
What is the role of the CAB?
15
CAB As Bridge
16
CAB Members View of Role
  • Bridge, link, go-between, liaison
  • Provide advice on protocols
  • Identify potential research ideas
  • Clearinghouse for ethical issues
  • Legitimize research in communities
  • respond to misinformation
  • provide access
  • social marketing/public relations

17
Conflict in Role
  • To whom is the CAB accountable? Is it to the
    community? Is it to the local municipal
    authorities? Or, is it to the research programs?
    That is a gray area. That is an area we are
    struggling with.
  • -- CAB Member

18
Representation How do you put a CAB together?
19
Broad Community Model
  • Cross-section of larger community (Zimbabwe
    Thailand)
  • government officials
  • educators
  • religious leaders
  • NGO representatives
  • people living with HIV
  • Long term view of mission
  • Want sustainability

20
Population Specific Model
  • Needs of a specific group
  • African Americans
  • Women
  • IDUs
  • MSM
  • Protocol driven (Philadelphia, Birmingham)
  • Preparedness driven (LA, Peru)

21
Recruitment Retention Why do people serve on
CABs?
22
CAB Motivation
  • Concern about impact of HIV on their community or
    population
  • Personal experience. e.g., HIV-infected
  • Opportunity to learn about other agencies,
    research, influence policy
  • Reimbursement -- lunch, tokens, travel and
    stipends
  • Prestige -- self worth having something to
    contribute

23
Self Worth Meaning
  • Just being part of something that means
    something. Sometimes when you are a drug user or
    ex-drug user. You know, being a part of
    something good and right means something.
  • -- CAB Member

24
CAB Barriers -- Recruitment
  • Site needs to decide on a model
  • Need to recruit accordingly
  • Find community leaders with time to commit to the
    project
  • Identify and retain members from marginalized
    populations

25
CAB Barriers -- Retention
  • Disparities in knowledge
  • Practical concerns -- e.g. time, transportation,
    child care
  • Illness -- people living with HIV
  • Setting reasonable expectations

26
Disparities in Knowledge
  • Its frustrating when you got to keep
    interrupting to tell them could you explain that?
    Or, could you talk in laymans terms? They make
    you feel stupid.
  • -- CAB Member

27
What do CAB and research team members want from
each other?
28
Research Team Wants
  • Feedback -- constructive criticism to help
    improve protocols
  • Limits -- help in clarifying to participants
    what will not be provided
  • Understanding -- why people do or do not
    participate in protocol
  • Access -- ability to move research into new areas
    -- access to communities, populations

29
CAB Wants
  • Validation - respect for their expertise and
    recommendations
  • Standing -- to be seen as resource for
    information in community
  • Training -- HIV, research details, translating
    scientific language
  • Feedback -- research findings to community
  • Action -- impatient to act now

30
Why do people participate in prevention trials?
31
Motivations
  • Altruism - desire to help community
  • Reimbursements -- need money
  • Access to HIV STD testing
  • Access to quality medical care
  • Support networks
  • Gain knowledge about HIV

32
Barriers
  • Lack of knowledge about research
  • Distrust of medical establishment
  • Distrust of researchers
  • Fear of HIV testing
  • Fear of needles
  • HIV-related stigma
  • Fear of being identified with a stigmatized group

33
What is the role of the CAB in identifying and
resolving ethical issues?
34
Identifying Ethical Issues
  • Ethical issues permeated interviews with both CAB
    members and research team members
  • CABs view themselves as protecting vulnerable
    people
  • Participants and CAB members often from poor or
    stigmatized groups

35
Respect for Persons --Informed Consent
  • CABs worked to assure that participants had
    adequate information about procedures and risks
  • People must know what are the consequences and
    advantages are before going into the study

36
Problems with Informed Consent
  • Emphasis on forms rather than process
  • Individual autonomy may be a culturally bound
    concept
  • CABs see their role as protecting vulnerable
    people, rather than individuals protecting
    themselves
  • Little discussion of extent to which
    participation is voluntary often viewed no real
    alternatives

37
Beneficence --Risk/Benefits
  • Established CABs have been involved in debate
    about risks and benefits of participation studies
  • But emerging CABs have not

38
HPTN Problem
  • CABs identified problem of lack of treatment or
    social support for people who are diagnosed with
    HIV and not eligible for trial
  • -- We open that Pandoras Box and that person is
    positive. What then?
  • -- CAB Member

39
Distributive Justice
  • Guinea pig term was used by participants or CAB
    members at 4 sites
  • --- Why is a vaccine study being conducted in
    Peru since they might not see benefit from it.
  • --- Are we being sacrificed in order to develop
    a better product?

40
International Sites
  • Research must be practical for host country --
    need to leave something behind
  • -- Historically researchers came in, drew blood
    and left to write their papers.

41
An Example
  • Important debatable question brought to CAB --
    Should participants be give the results of CCR-5
    testing?
  • Briefing provided by research team member in lay
    language with Q A
  • CAB debates and outlines many reasons not to give
    feedback
  • In the end, the CAB said youve got to tell
    people.

42
Right to Know
  • ...the issue wasnt about can we predict how
    people are gonna react, but do people have a
    right to know. ...if youre testing something
    from their bodies these are not just people who
    are here for you to draw specimens from.

43
Recommendations
  • Develop strategies to make CAB meetings more
    productive
  • Bring debatable issues to the table
  • Bring participants into meetings
  • Continuous formal and informal training to
    respond to disparities in knowledge
  • cross site networking for CAB members
  • Train researchers in talking to community

44
Recommendations
  • Work with CABs to develop alternative methods of
    genuine informed consent
  • Greater emphasis on process
  • Increase attention on voluntary participation
  • Community building and leadership training as
    part of CAB development
  • Before organizing a meeting, may need to organize
    a community

45
Recommendations
  • Stipends to support CAB service
  • Need to remove disincentives
  • Develop plans for timely feedback of research
    findings to communities
  • Develop plans for sustainability
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