Tough Talks™ Virtual Simulation HIV Disclosure Intervention for Young Men Who Have Sex With Men: Development and Usability Testing (Preprint)

Author:

Hightow-Weidman Lisa B.ORCID,Muessig Kathryn,Soberano Zach,Rosso Matthew T.ORCID,Currie Andrew,Adams Larsen Margo,Knudtson Kelly,Vecchio Alyssa

Abstract

BACKGROUND

HIV status disclosure is an important decision with barriers specific to young men who have sex with men (YMSM), who have the highest rates of new HIV infections in the United States (US). Behavioral and social determinants of the difficulty to disclose can include fear of rejection, stigma, loss of financial stability, and a lack of communication skills. Once able to disclose, a person may have increased access to social support, improved medication adherence, and informed risk reduction conversations. Despite the known challenges and advantages of disclosure, there are few effective tools supporting this behavior.

OBJECTIVE

To address this gap in disclosure interventions, Tough Talks™ App (TT), an mHealth intervention using artificially intelligent (AI)-facilitated role-playing scenarios, was developed for YMSM. Here we report stages of developing the integrated app and the results of the usability testing.

METHODS

Building on the results of a successful phase 1, we subsequently developed an enhanced interactive dialogue feature for YMSM to practice disclosing their HIV status and placed this feature within the context of an comprehensive intervention app to support disclosure. We assessed the new iteration for acceptability and relevance in a usability study with eight YMSM with HIV. Participants completed a pre-survey, app modules, and a semi-structured qualitative interview.

RESULTS

TT content and activities were based on Social Cognitive Theory and Disclosure Process Model framework and expanded into a 4-module curriculum. The AI-facilitated scenarios and associated utterance database were refined from a crowdsourced comic book contest. In usability testing, YMSM reported high satisfaction with TT, with 31 out of 33 activities (93%) receiving positive ratings. Participants found the AI-facilitated scenarios and activities to be representative and relevant to their lived experiences, though, they noted difficulty having nuanced disclosure conversations with the AI.

CONCLUSIONS

TT was an engaging and practical intervention for self-disclosure among YMSM with HIV. Facilitating informed disclosure decisions has the potential to impact engagement in sexual risk behaviors and HIV care. More information is needed about the ideal environment, technical support, and clinical connection for an mHealth disclosure intervention. TT is being tested as a scalable intervention in a multi-site, randomized control trial to address outstanding questions on accessibility and effect on viral suppression.

CLINICALTRIAL

NCT03414372

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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