1,851
Participants
Start Date
March 15, 2022
Primary Completion Date
July 31, 2026
Study Completion Date
July 31, 2026
Multiple Family Groups for HIV stigma reduction (MFG-HIVSR) plus FEE
"In addition to the BSOC, ALHIV and their caregivers will participate in a family strengthening intervention plus a family economic empowerment intervention.~MFG is an evidence-based family-centered, group-delivered, evidence-informed, strength-based 10-session (weekly) intervention for children whose families struggle with poverty. Six additional sessions covering HIV stigma stigma-related issues will be added.~ALHIV will receive a YDA with a 1:1 matched savings program at a financial institution accredited by the Bank of Uganda. Each YDA will be opened in the name of the adolescent, with their primary caregiver as a co-signer, until the adolescent turns 18 years. The account will then be matched with money from the program on 1:1 rate."
Multiple Family Groups for HIV stigma reduction (MFG-HIVSR) plus FEE plus Group-based stigma reduction for educators (GED-HIVSR).
In addition to BSOC and MFG-HIVSR+FEE, ALHIV in this arm will receive the school-level HIV stigma reduction intervention targeting teachers, school nurses, matrons, and administrators (headteachers, director of studies) in their schools. GED-HIVSR seeks to impart educators in the intervention schools with HIV related knowledge, provide a safe space for educators to explore their personal values and bias that may promote or hinder their role of supportive individuals and systems for ALHIV, and empower them with knowledge and skills to act as change agents within their schools.
Bolstered Standard of Care (BSOC)
All participants (in control and treatment arms) will receive medical and psychosocial support as part of the BSOC. 1) Medical SOC: All public clinics, including our study sites, follow procedures for pediatric ART initiation and monitoring, as outlined in the National Department of Health Guidelines for pediatric HIV care in Uganda. Specifically, immediately after initiation, or if clinically unstable, ALHIV are seen more frequently (weekly to monthly). Laboratory data (VL and CD4 counts) are collected every six months until the patient is stabilized and then annually, using the National Health Laboratory Service standardized protocol. A
International Center for Child Health and Development Field Office, Masaka
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
Washington University School of Medicine
OTHER