Yale University

Training in Nursing Interventions for HIV and Addiction in Criminal Justice Settings

Principle Investigator(s):

Funder: National Institute on Drug Abuse
Project period: 09/01/2017 - 08/31/2021
Grant Type: Research
Further Detail

Abstract Text:

Over the four years of this proposal, Dr. Culbert will achieve his career goal of establishing an independent career path developing, testing, and disseminating interventions for HIV and addiction through three training objectives: (1 Develop expertise in research methods to develop, test, and evaluate evidence-based interventions for HIV and addiction with a focus on HIV+ prisoners in low and middle-income countries; (2 Gain experience delivering and testing complex interventions for behavior change with individuals through well-designed clinical trials; 3) Increase proficiency in statistical methods for analyzing clinical trials and techniques for evaluating processes of implementation. A mentored career development award is essential at this stage to provide the candidate with training and experience to develop and test complex interventions with prisoners. Although the candidate received excellent postdoctoral mentoring, he has no prior experience developing, testing, or evaluating evidence-based interventions, which are his career aims. Dr. Culbert has assembled an outstanding team of mentors in the fields of HIV, intervention development, and clinical trials. Under their guidance, he will complete formal coursework and conduct research to achieve his career goals and submit a highly competitive R01/R34 upon completion of the K award. The HIV epidemic in Indonesia is expanding and closely intertwined with substance use and incarceration. Very few people living with HIV (<8%) receive treatment with antiretroviral therapy (ART), and HIV-related mortality has increased 427% from 2005-13, despite global reductions. At the core of Indonesia's HIV epidemic are people who inject drugs, and prisoners for whom ART adherence is problematic, especially after prison release. Effective use of ART in prisoners at the point of release could improve health outcomes and limit the spread of HIV. Set in the context of Indonesia's large treatment gap, the proposed mentored research projects are highly innovative because they are the first studies outside the U.S. to develop and test a medication adherence intervention for released prisoners, who globally are at markedly increased risk of ART non-adherence and mortality. These aims directly address NIDA (FY2016) priority areas for AIDS research including: 1) engaging and retaining substance users in care; and 2) developing evidence-based interventions for challenging, real-world settings. In Project 1, we will develop an ART adherence intervention for released prisoners in Indonesia, using ATHENA (Adherence Through Home Education and Nursing Assessment), an evidence-based intervention, as our conceptual framework. In Project 2, we will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial to examine cultural acceptability and organizational feasibility of the intervention. This is not a replication study. Rather, we use a coherent methodology (ADAPT-ITT) to culturally adapt ATHENA to address the transition from prison – resulting in a new evidence-based intervention. Dr. Culbert is uniquely poised to conduct this work because of his strong background in nursing, his Indonesian language skills, and previous research experience in Indonesian prisons. The candidate requires substantial training, however, to be able to develop, test, and evaluate complex interventions with prisoners in international settings.