A Randomized Trial of ImpACT+, a Coping Intervention for HIV Infected Women With Sexual Trauma in South Africa

NAActive, not recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

350

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

February 18, 2021

Primary Completion Date

May 30, 2025

Study Completion Date

May 30, 2026

Conditions
HIVTrauma Exposure
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Improving AIDS Care After Trauma +

ImpACT+ integrates skills for HIV treatment adherence and coping with trauma, tailored to the South African context. This includes exploration of values informing care engagement, recognizing the synergistic stress of sexual trauma and HIV, understanding the contribution of stressors to maladaptive coping, and developing adaptive methods for coping as alternatives to avoidance. ImpACT+ will be delivered in private spaces at the primary care clinic and will consist of 6 individual sessions followed by 6 maintenance check-ins. Individual sessions focus on coping, adherence, and care engagement during an early critical period, while maintenance check-ins reinforce positive change and support ongoing implementation of skills. Evidence supports a 6-session format in low-resource settings. Individual sessions will begin within 2 weeks after the baseline survey and be completed by the 4-month assessment. Maintenance check-ins will begin following the 4-month assessment.

BEHAVIORAL

Adapted Problem-Solving Therapy

Participants will receive three weekly individual sessions of adapted PST. The goal of PST is to identify problems that interfere with daily activities and address them through problem-orientation work. We anticipate stressors will include (a) relationship difficulties, including family stress, (b) financial stress and unemployment, (c) general impact of HIV infection, and (d) overall chronic stress. Thus, PST may indirectly address stressors that may impact care engagement, but will not address the intersection of HIV and trauma specifically.

Trial Locations (1)

Unknown

University of Cape Town, Cape Town

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

University of Cape Town

OTHER

collaborator

National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

NIH

lead

Columbia University

OTHER