AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored a new intervention for women using cocaine, focusing on their challenges with stimulant use, trauma, and managing HIV.
  • All participants received monetary rewards for abstaining from stimulants and engaging in urine screenings, with most completing additional writing sessions aimed at emotional expression.
  • While the intervention showed promise with good participation rates, there were still obstacles highlighted by non-participants, indicating the need for further research on its effectiveness.

Article Abstract

This pilot randomized controlled trial examined the feasibility and acceptability of a Syndemics intervention targeting the intersection of stimulant use, trauma, and difficulties with HIV disease management in cocaine-using women. All participants received contingency management (CM) for 3 months with financial incentives for stimulant abstinence during thrice-weekly urine screening and refilling antiretroviral medications monthly. Sixteen participants were randomized to complete four expressive writing (n = 9) or four neutral writing (n = 7) sessions delivered during the CM intervention period. Completion rates for writing sessions were high (15 of 16 women completed all four sessions) and engagement in CM urine screening was moderate with women randomized to expressive writing providing a median of 11 non-reactive urine samples for stimulants. There were non-significant trends for those randomized to expressive writing to provide more CM urine samples that were non-reactive for stimulants, report greater decreases in severity of cocaine use, and display reductions in log HIV viral load at 6 months. Although the Syndemics intervention was feasible and acceptable to many women, qualitative interviews with eligible participants who were not randomized identified structural and psychological barriers to engagement. Further clinical research is needed to test the efficacy of Syndemics interventions with HIV-positive, cocaine-using women.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6880306PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10461-019-02625-2DOI Listing

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