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Positive Prevention

Positive Prevention. Gus Cairns UKC UK Coalition of People Living with HIV and AIDS. What is it?. Work with/for people living with HIV and AIDS (PLHAs) to prevent the onward transmission of HIV Gets called both ‘primary’ and ‘secondary’ prevention according to tradition .

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Positive Prevention

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  1. Positive Prevention Gus Cairns UKC UK Coalition of People Living with HIV and AIDS www.guscairns.com

  2. What is it? • Work with/for people living with HIV and AIDS (PLHAs) to prevent the onward transmission of HIV • Gets called both ‘primary’ and ‘secondary’ prevention according to tradition www.guscairns.com

  3. Positive prevention makes sense • On an economic and efficiency level • On a legal level • On a human rights level www.guscairns.com

  4. Positive prevention makes sense “Preventive interventions with positive individuals are likely to have a greater impact on the epidemic, for an equivalent input of cost, time, resources, than preventative interventions focused on negative individuals. “A change in the risky behaviour of an HIV positive person will, on average, and in almost all affected populations, have a much bigger impact on the spread of the virus than an equivalent change in the behaviour of an HIV negative person.” King-Spooner S. HIV prevention and the positive population. Int J STD AIDS 10(3):141-50. 1999. www.guscairns.com

  5. Why not part of prevention from the start? “Historically, there has been a reluctance to work on HIV/STI prevention with people with HIV because of perceptions that the concept of prevention for people already infected is inherently contradictory. “There have also been justifiable concerns about victimising an alreadystigmatised group. In addition, there has been a reluctance to acknowledge that people with HIV havesex, and also to get to grips with the complex ethical issues surrounding people with HIV’s responsibilities towards others.” International HIV/AIDS Alliance. Positive Prevention: Prevention Strategies for People with HIV/AIDS. Draft Background Paper available at http://www.aidsalliance.org/sw9438.asp. July 2003. www.guscairns.com

  6. What might it involve?(International HIV/AIDS Alliance paper, 2003) www.guscairns.com

  7. Summary • Voluntary Testing…and counselling? • Post-test counselling • Condom provision • Behavioural skills interventions • Help with disclosure • Prevention of MTCT • Peer and community support • Family support and disclosure • ARV provision • Harm reduction for IDUs • Other biomedical interventions (‘New’ prevention technologies) • Reducing stigma • Legislative reform • Empowerment of women • Improving the legal and social position of MSM • Economic development www.guscairns.com

  8. Discussed here • Normalising universal testing • What do PLHAs already do to reduce transmission? • Counselling and condom provision • Serosorting • Other risk-reduction strategies • Disclosure • What works? • Mass-media programmes • ARV and STI treatment provision • ‘New’ prevention technologies • Criminalisation and its impact www.guscairns.com

  9. Test, test, test… • CDC in USA calculates that when diagnosed, PLHAs cut risk behaviour by 2/3 • Universal testing drive: recommended testing all 13-65 year olds: Washington DC recently extended this to 85 • Then what? CDC prevention interventions mention: • ongoing case management • focused risk-reduction counselling • medical interventions (leaving these undefined) • support for other psychosocial stressors (leaving these also undefined) www.guscairns.com

  10. Are CDC’s assumptions justified? • Meta-analysis of 11 US studies • 53% reduction in unprotected sex post-diagnosis • 78% reduction in unsafe (i.e. unprotected and serodiscordant) sex after diagnosis www.guscairns.com

  11. Are CDC’s assumptions justified? • Typical study: 113 recently HIV-infected gay men. Interviewed 3 months and six weeks after diagnosis. • 47% reported decline in sexual partners at second interview, 34% the same, 19.5% an increase. Overall decline; 34% • Unprotected sex did not decline but unprotected sex with negative partners declined 37.5% and with partners of unknown status 47%. • Limitations: small numbers, no long-term follow-up Gorbach PM et al. Transmission behaviors of recently HIV-infected men who have sex with men. JAIDS 42(1), 80-85. 2006. www.guscairns.com

  12. Are CDC’s assumptions justified? • Longitudinal study in HIV- negative female ‘sex workers’, Mombasa, 1993-2000 • Ave follow-up > five years, 3.8 post-diagnosis • N= 1600: 265 seroconversions = 7.7% p.a. • 44% reduction in unsafe sex incidents after seroconversion – maintained through time – but after adjusting for age OR= 0.69 • 100% condom use up from 59% to 67% • More than one sexual partner in previous week declined from 20% to 9% • More than two sexual encounters in previous week declined from 27% to 16% McClelland RS et al. HIV-1 acquisition and disease progression are associated with decreased high-risk sexual behaviour among Kenyan female sex workers. AIDS 20(15): 1969-1973. 2006. www.guscairns.com

  13. How much behaviour change do you need to reduce prevalence?* • When R(t) >1, epidemics will increase. R(t) = c. annual incidence/prevalence ratio (IPR(t)) • IPR must be < 1/ survival time for prevalence to decline. If mean survival with HIV is 20 years, IRP has to be <0.05. • Denmark study†: Survival time with HIV if diagnosed at 25 = 18 years men, 24 years women • IPR in gay men in UK is c. 0.11 and slowly increasing. • ∴May need 50-66%further reduction in transmission events to contain epidemic. * White PJ et al. Is HIV out of control in Britain? An example of analysing patterns of HIV spreading using incidence-to-prevalence ratios. AIDS 20(14),1898-1901. 2006. † Lohse N et al. Median survival and age-specific mortality of Danish HIV-infected individuals: a comparison with the general population. 16th International AIDS Conference, Toronto, 2006. Abstract MOPE0310. www.guscairns.com

  14. The incidence problem • Baltimore African-American gay men: 48% positive* • Two-thirds unaware • 87% of these had tested: 60% in the previous year • HIV incidence age 15-22 4%, age 23-29 15% • London gay men†: 11% HIV+, of which 1/3 undiagnosed and 1/5 had had previous negative test * MMWR, HIV incidence among young MSM – 7 US Cities, 1994-2000, June 01, 2001 † Dodds JP et al. Increasing risk behaviour and high levels of undiagnosed HIV infection in a community sample of homosexual men. Sex. Transm. Inf. 2004;80;236-240 www.guscairns.com

  15. Test, test, test…concs. • CDC estimate: diagnosis  ≥ 66% reduction in unsafe sex. May be an overestoimate. • ‘Universal’ testing = probably cost- effective where general prevalence <0.2%. • Opt-out testing at GUM clinics essential. • GP and A&E staff awareness-raising • Need for ethical safeguards so that voluntary testing remains voluntary • Home testing? Reliability questions www.guscairns.com

  16. Positive prevention and positive-led prevention • Easier to reinforce a positive behaviour than change a negative one • Information alone is not enough. People need information, motivation and behavioural skills • Programmes should be tailored to help people sustain behaviour that supports good sexual health and relationships, and to address barriers to adopting them. www.guscairns.com

  17. What do PLHAs already do? • Pamina Gorbach: JAIDS 42(1):80-85. 2006 (again): deline in sexual risk behaviour in post-diagnosis gay men. • Ave. 34% decrease in partner numbers in previous 3 months (7.9 to 5.2) • Half decreased partner numbers, a third stayed the same, a fifth increased numbers. • Condom use increase? No. 59% had had UAI at both timepoints: difference was with whom… www.guscairns.com

  18. Gorbach and serosorting • Among men who had UAI (n = 103): • Proportion of UAI partners who were negative had declined 37% in 3 months • Proportion who were positive had increased by 188% • Proportion of unknown status had halved www.guscairns.com

  19. Serosorting is… San Francisco Department of Public Health – HIV Epidemiology Annual Report 2004 www.guscairns.com

  20. And in London… Elford J et al. High-risk sexual behaviour among London gay men: no longer increasing. AIDS 19(18) 2171-2174. 2005. www.guscairns.com

  21. …and in London (contd) • Elford 2006 (UK): 1,687 people attending HIV clinics in NE London. Women and gay men 50% less likely to have unprotected sex if partner negative than if they were positive and heterosexual men 75% less likely. www.guscairns.com

  22. And in HIV negatives… • Sydney study • Casual UAI in HIV negatives (so not ‘negotiated safety’) • UAI restricted to partners of known negative status increased from 12.5% to 25% in previous six months • Proportion who had UAI with partner of unknown status decreased from 85% to 70% Mao Limin et al. 'Serosorting' in casual anal sex of HIV-negative gay men is noteworthy and is increasing in Sydney, Australia. AIDS 20(8):1204-1206. 2006. www.guscairns.com

  23. Does serosorting work? • Golden M., CROI 2006 (abstract #163) • New diagnoses among: • ‘Always’ condom users: 1.5% • No special precautions: 4.1% • Tried to serosort: 2.6% • Condom use 76% effective • Serosorting about 40% effective www.guscairns.com

  24. Does serosorting work? (contd) • San Francisco gay men*, 1998-2003: • Rectal gonorrhoea (good marker for URAI) increased 97% during this time • Syphilis from 8 cases 1998 to 314 cases 2003 • HIV incidence peaked in 1999 at 4% - down or steady since then • Increases in UAI but decreases in UAI between partners of unknown status during this time *Truong HM et al. HIV serosorting? Increases in sexually transmitted infections and risk behavior without concurrent increase in HIV incidence among men who have sex with men in San Francisco. Sixteenth International AIDS Conference, Toronto, abstract MOAC0105, 2006. www.guscairns.com

  25. Should we promote serosorting? • ‘Knowledge’ of another person’s HIV status may in fact be guesswork* *Hickson F et al. London Counts: HIV prevention needs and interventions among gay and bisexual men in the sixteen London Health Authorities. Sigma Research, 2001. ISBN 0 872956 51 3 www.guscairns.com

  26. Should we promote serosorting? • Serosorting does not prevent other Sexually Transmitted Infections† Herida M et al. Rectal lymphogranuloma venereum surveillance in France 2004-2005. EurosurveillanceMonthly, vol 11 Issue 9, September 2006. www.guscairns.com

  27. Should we promote serosorting? • Serosorting is elective unprotected sex. Ethical problem about promotion. • But serosorting requires two conditions to work…. • Knowledge of status • Disclosure of status • …and we should promote those! www.guscairns.com

  28. HIV+ people do use condoms… • In SUMIT study* [see more below] 83% of HIV+ gay men used condoms with HIV- or unknown status partners – but inconsistently *Wolitski RJ et al. Effects of a peer-led behavioral intervention to reduce HIV transmission and promote serostatus disclosure among HIV-seropositive gay and bisexual men. AIDS 19(Suppl 1): S99-109. 2005. www.guscairns.com

  29. Condoms and counselling in a high-risk group can make a dramatic difference… • Ghana PrEP study, high risk women* • One-third as many infections in women on tenofovir as on placebo • Not statistically significant (p=0.24), partly because incidence half of what was anticipated • Condom use at last sex was 52% at screeningand 94% at follow-up = 87.5% decrease in unprotected sex Peterson L. et al. Findings from a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) for prevention of HIV infection in women. Sixteenth International AIDS Conference, Toronto. Abstract ThLb0103, 2006. www.guscairns.com

  30. …and in HIV-positive people • Rotherham-Borus, 2003* • HIV+ youth, 13-24, 37/36/27 Latino/White/Black • Randomised to ‘Act Safe’ 23-session intervention or control • Intervention  82% fewer unprotected sexual acts, 45% fewer sexual partners, 50% fewer HIV-negative sexual partners, 31% less substance use *Rotherham-Borus MJ et al. Efficacy of a preventive intervention for youths living with HIV. Am J Public Health. 2001 March; 91(3): 400–405. www.guscairns.com

  31. …and via brief interventions • Richardson, 2004* • Eligible HIV+ patients at six California HIV clinics randomised to control or 3-5 minute ‘gain framed’ or ‘loss-framed’ [see below] counselling intervention • 38% reduction in unprotected sex in recipients of ‘loss-framed’ counselling who had >1 sex partner *Richardson J et al. Effect of brief safer-sex counseling by medical providers to HIV-1 seropositive patients: a multi-clinic assessment. AIDS 18(8) 1179-1186. 2004. www.guscairns.com

  32. Disclose, disclose, disclose… • Point A: • Unpublished GMFA survey, basis of ‘Why won’t he tell?’ campaign: • Only 20% of HIV+ gay men disclose before sex, 40% never do, 40% sometimes • Point B: • Bruno Spire, France*: • 97% of HIV+ people in a steady relationship eventually disclose and of the other 3%, 2% use condoms • We have to help PLHAs get from point A to point B as fast as possible *Spire B et al. Concealment of HIV and unsafe sex with steady partner is extremely infrequent . 3rd IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis and Treatment, Rio. Abstract MoPeLB10.7P01. 2005. www.guscairns.com

  33. Toronto disclosure posters • Uganda (King): 1,092 HIV-positive. 69% had disclosed HIV status to partner. Higher rates of disclosure ⇔ higher rates of condom use. • South Africa (Simbayi): > 1,000 HIV+ people: 58% disclosed HIV status to partner: disclosure ⇔ less unprotected sex. • France (Spire): 1,187 HIV+ people: 95% of men and 91% of women had disclosed to partner: non-disclosure ⇔ unprotected sex in gay men but in heterosexuals with poverty • Botswana (Percy-de Korte) 90% of 275 ARV recipients disclosed HIV status to family, 71% to partner. 48% had reduced number of sexual partners since diagnosis. But 39% said that receiving ARVs had resulted in either reduced condom use or more partners. www.guscairns.com

  34. RCTs of disclosure interventions… • [NONE] www.guscairns.com

  35. Other strategies • ‘Strategic positioning’ = HIV+ on bottom • Insertive sex 10x less risky but not risk-free • Withdrawal – see next slide • Viral load –see slide after next www.guscairns.com

  36. Withdrawal • Campaigns based on assumption that withdrawal before ejaculation is less risky • Widely practised but as contraception and STD prevention method anyway www.guscairns.com

  37. Withdrawal and strategic positioning… • Poster at Toronto questions these assumptions* • Case-control study of Ontario gay men, 128 HIV+, 255 HIV- • Adjusted Odds Ratios for seroconversion: • Unprotected insertive anal sex (UIAS) with HIV+: 3.05 • Unprotected receptive anal sex (URAS) with HIV+: 3.02 • URAS with exposure to semen: 1.72 • URAS without exposure to semen, i.e. withdrawal: 2.70 • URAS with delayed application of condom: 4.25 • Another study from Australia† found that UIAS without ejaculation was more risky than with ejaculation *Burchell AN et al. Sexual Risk Factors Leading to Recent HIV Infection among Gay and Bisexual Men in Ontario, Canada. Sixteenth International AIDS Conference, Toronto. Abstract no MOPE0378. † Read T et al. Risk factors for incident HIV infection amongst homosexually active men in Melbourne, Australia: a case-control study. Sixteenth International AIDS Conference, Toronto. Abstract no CDC0067. www.guscairns.com

  38. Viral load • 78% of 507 gay men in SF* knew term `viral load` and 1/3 had discussed it with a serodiscordant partner to make decisions about sexual practices. • 119 men in Sydney† in HIV-serodiscordant regular relationship used VL to help decisions on condom use. 39.4% had UAI when partner’s HIV last VL test was undetectable, 20.8% when it was detectable • Problem is that 12.5% of gay men at any one time have detectable HIV VL in semen when it is not detectable in plasma‡ *Goldhammer H et al. Beliefs about viral load, sexual positioning and transmission risk among HIV+ men who have sex with men (MSM): Shaping a secondary prevention intervention. 2005 National HIV Prevention Conference, Atlanta, USA, presentation W0-D1201. †Van de Ven P et al. Undetectable viral load is associated with sexual risk taking in HIV serodiscordant gay couples in Sydney. AIDS 19(2): 179-184. 2005. ‡Taylor S et al. Seminal Super Shedding of HIV: implications for Sexual Transmission. 10th CROI, Boston, 2003. Abstract 454. www.guscairns.com

  39. So what works in behavioural interventions?(Two meta-analyses, 2006) • Nicole Crepaz, AIDS 20:143–157. 2006. • Measured ‘sexual risk incidents’ after 12 RCT interventions • Significant reduction (43%) • What worked: • Interventions specifically focused on safer sex… • Which also included help with disclosure, self-esteem etc • Were intensive • Were delivered in a clinical setting or at a voluntary organisation providing services • At least partly delivered by professional counsellors • At least partly delivered on a one-to-one basis www.guscairns.com

  40. What works II • Blair Johnson, JAIDS 41(5): 642-650. 2006. • 19 RCT interventions • Ave 16% increase in condom use • Worked better for: • Younger • ‘Motivational*’ or taught behavioural skills (12% condom use increase) or both (33%) • Non-gay; but no programme directed at gay men provided both ingredients proven to be necessary • Information alone made no difference but helped other components * Motivational = providing things that improved participants’ overall quality of life such as increased social support or self-confidence. www.guscairns.com

  41. Quote from Johnson • “Perhaps the most surprising finding of this work is that more than two decades into the epidemic, there have been so few randomly-controlled trials of interventions that focus in people living with HIV, though there have been literally hundreds of studies conducted with uninfected populations. There is an urgent need for research in this area.” www.guscairns.com

  42. Compare prevention for HIV- • Largest meta-analysis is Albarracin (2005). Covered 345 intervention groups and 99 control groups. Only outcome measure = condom use • What worked best: • ‘Active’ interventions increased condom use by 30%, ‘passive’ ones by 5% • Taught behavioural skills • Used cognitive work to improve attitudes towards condom use • At least partly delivered in clinical settings • Arguments that used threat or fear [‘loss framed’] consistently failed to work www.guscairns.com

  43. Loss-framed and gain-framed messages • From Richardson, 2004 • Gain-framed: • “We encourage you to make choices that do not put yourself or others at risk. Safer sex protects you from other STDs and other strains of HIV” • Loss-framed: • “We encourage you to make choices that do not put yourself or others at risk. Unsafe sex exposes you to other STDs and strains of HIV” • Loss-framed messages do not work with HIV negative people. Gain framed messages do not work with HIV positive people. • Why? Control. People respond to messages implying that they are capable of making a change that will have a directly protective effect on their health. www.guscairns.com

  44. BEWARE: what seems to work may not! • SUMIT study, SF and NY, USA* • 811 HIV+ gay men randomised to one discussion session or six 3-hour workshops. Videos, discussion groups, roleplay, freebies • They loved it! Very high scores for enjoyment, learning, life changes, new friends • Made no difference to behaviour at all. Unprotected sex marginally but non-significantly improved; disclosure got marginally worse *Wolitski RJ et al. Effects of a peer-led behavioral intervention to reduce HIV transmission and promote serostatus disclosure among HIV-seropositive gay and bisexual men. AIDS 19(Suppl 1): S99-109. 2005. www.guscairns.com

  45. What seems to work may not. Why? • Used community rather than clinical setting: health not emphasised • Emphasis on protecting partners rather than own health. Self-interest works better than guilt. • Gain-framed messages (‘you’ll protect others’) rather than loss-framed ones (‘you’ll mess up if you don’t’). Evidence* that loss-framed messages work better with HIV+ people. • Peer group structure can be counterproductive. The cautious end up modelling the risk-takers! • Improved confidence can mean improved ability to find sex! • Too many choices? Maybe one method (condom use, disclosure, serosorting) should be taught at a time. • Worked better in SF than NY. Pre-existing community structure and norms matter. www.guscairns.com *Richardson J. Prevention in HIV Clinical Settings. 13th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Denver, Abstract 165. 2006.

  46. What works? Conclusion • Based on behavioural theory • At least partly conducted by skilled professionals • Clinical or service-providing setting • One-to-one or group, but not ‘peer group’ • ‘Loss framed’, emphasising adverse consequences of unsafe sex to health and relationships • Specifically addresses safer-sex skills but also… • …Addresses what Johnson calls ‘myriad of other issues relating to HIV’ eg mental health, disclosure, stigma, employability, poverty, isolation etc. www.guscairns.com

  47. What about the 88%? • According to CDC only 12% of HIV positive people have ever attended an in-person HIV prevention intervention www.guscairns.com

  48. Do mass interventions work for PLHAs? • Not if they portray PLHAs as the danger… • Not if they address them in the third person… • Where would you put them anyway? Target-audience publications are read by HIV- and HIV+, who need different messages www.guscairns.com

  49. Internet interventions (www.hivstopswithme.org, US) www.guscairns.com

  50. Internet interventions (www.DIPEx.org, UK) www.guscairns.com

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