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Newswise — CHICAGO --- A novel online HIV prevention program with spicy soap operas and interactive games -- like a rising thermometer of sexual risk -- reduced sexually transmitted infections in gay young men by 40 percent, reports a Northwestern Medicine study.
“That is a huge effect,” said lead author Brian Mustanski, director of The Institute for Sexual and Minority Health and Wellbeing at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “We were expecting it be 20 percent.”
This is the first online HIV prevention program to show effects on a biological outcome. It is targeted to young men ages 18 to 29 who have sex with men, who have the highest rate of HIV infections in the U.S. The results show the effectiveness of an online program to promote safe sex in this highest risk group.
These young men represent 2 percent of young people in the U.S. but account for almost 70 percent of HIV diagnoses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Their rate of new HIV diagnoses is 44 times higher than that of other men.
“The numbers are alarming,” Mustanski said. “The CDC estimates that without an intervention half of young black gay men and a quarter of Latino gay men will get HIV at some point in their lives.”
The study was published today, June 28, in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
Prior studies using eHealth HIV prevention programs used self-reports to determine their effectiveness. “People can sometimes forget or may not always tell the truth. A biological outcome is often considered more trustworthy,” Mustanski said.
Mustanski and colleagues developed the program called Keep it Up! The study included 901 participants primarily from the Atlanta, Chicago and New York City study sites. Participants who used Keep It Up! had a 40 percent lower incidence of sexually transmitted disease -- specifically chlamydia and gonorrhea -- compared with the control group at 12 months.
Instead of the typical HIV prevention approach, which provides facts about how HIV is transmitted and how to use a condom, Keep It Up! focuses on the lives of young gay men and weaves HIV prevention information into their typical experiences.
Each of the program’s modules targets a particular setting that is relevant to the men such as dating and starting new relationships. One is about going to a bar and using drugs and alcohol.
In that episode, men learned the benefits of avoiding substance use in sexual situations and how to reduce their risk when they do use substances (e.g., making sure to bring a condom with them, so they don't need to navigate obtaining and deciding to use a condom while intoxicated). In one of the interactive games, men could look at different sexual behaviors and rate them on a “thermometer of risk.” Then the game tells them if they got it right. “The game let them see ‘what are things I can do that are pleasurable but wouldn’t put me at risk?’” Mustanski said. A soap opera tracks a group of young men who make assumptions about their partners. “One guy assumes the guy he is dating is monogamous, but he never talked to the guy about it. In fact, his partner was dating a few people,” Mustanski said.
“We know that the majority of HIV transmissions in young gay/bisexual guys occur in a serious relationship, so it is important for them to have explicit discussions about whether their relationship is open or closed and that both partners get tested for HIV and share their status,” Mustanski said.
Another man in the video assumes his partner is HIV negative while the partner assumes he is positive. “It shows you can’t assume it’s your partner’s job to disclose their HIV status. It’s really important to have everyone take responsibility for those conversations,” Mustanski said. The video emphasizes the importance of regular HIV testing and skills negotiating condom use.
Participants said they learned a lot from the games and soap opera.
One commented, “I didn’t really think about my own behavior until I watched the soap opera. When I saw those characters, I was judging them, but then I realized I was doing the same (risky) thing.”
“It motivated me to get tested,” another man wrote about participating in the program. “I had waited two years because I was afraid of the result, so without Keep It Up I would still be in the dark. Also, I liked that the content dealt with real-world situations like meeting at clubs or online.”
PrEP was Food and Drug Administration approved as an HIV prevention medication around the start of the trial, so the team moved quickly to add content on PrEP into the booster sessions of the intervention. That content was designed so it could be easily updated as new information emerged about PrEP.
Mustanski emphasized, “The core principals of how we motivated risk reduction are equally applicable to PrEP. eHealth interventions need to be updatable as new developments occur in the HIV prevention landscape.”
Study participants had received a HIV-negative test during screening. They had not been in a monogamous relationship for at least six months prior to recruitment and reported at least one or more acts of condom-less anal sex during that period. Participants completed online questionnaires and performed testing for urethral and rectal gonorrhea and chlamydia upon enrollment as well as 12 months post intervention.
Mustanski hopes to get a grant for a trial to implement and disseminate the program in 50 U.S. counties. “It’s not enough just to put it on a website. We want to find the most cost-effective way to get this out in the community and how to reach the people with the highest risk,” he said.
In 2015, the U.S. National HIV/AIDS strategy called for a 15 percent reduction in HIV incidence among young gay men who have sex with men. Only two of 59 current HIV-related evidence-based interventions target them. HIV prevention programs for gay young men should not be simple modifications of those developed for heterosexual youth, because gay young men have different challenges related to their sexual orientation, such as feeling isolated or not having supportive networks.
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and National Institute of Mental Health (R01DA035145) of the National Institutes of Health.
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American Journal of Preventive Medicine; R01DA035145