At a glance
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Development of an Online Provider Intervention to Address Intersectional Stigma and Medical Mistrust in People Living With HIV
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Provider Intervention on Addressing Intersectional Stigma and Medical Mistrust in Patients with HIV for Stigma, Social. Completed, enrolled 59 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Intersectional stigma and medical mistrust are prevalent among Black and Latina/Latino Americans living with HIV and are key contributors to racial/ethnic health disparities; yet, there are no evidence-based provider-level interventions available for HIV care providers to address intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The investigators propose to develop an online provider intervention, with community stakeholders' input, that provides psychoeducation and skills-building around addressing intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The investigators will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial with 60 HIV care physicians (30/condition) to test the acceptability and feasibility of the online intervention and to determine preliminary effects (against a no-intervention control group) on providers' use of skills and HIV care delivery outcomes at baseline, immediate post, and 6-month follow-up.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The intervention will consist of psychoeducation and skills-building for HIV care providers to gain knowledge and skills needed to address intersectional stigma and medical mistrust with patients. The intervention will be online and conducted in groups.