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Crowdsourcing to expand HIV testing among men who have sex with men in China: A closed cohort stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
by
Liu, Aifeng
, Fu, Hongyun
, Li, Haochu
, Tang, Weiming
, Ong, Jason J.
, Ma, Wei
, Zhang, Ye
, Tucker, Joseph D.
, Wang, Cheng
, Li, Katherine T.
, Wu, Dan
, Yang, Ligang
, Huang, Wenting
, Mitchell, Kate M.
, Hudgens, Michael G.
, Vickerman, Peter
, Lu, Haidong
, Liao, Meizhen
, Wei, Chongyi
, Cao, Bolin
, Kang, Dianmin
, Liu, Chuncheng
, Smith, M. Kumi
, Zheng, Heping
, Yang, Bin
, Mollan, Katie R.
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Crowdsourcing
/ Dermatology
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Epidemiology
/ Global health
/ Health aspects
/ HIV
/ HIV tests
/ Hospitals
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Infectious diseases
/ Influence
/ Internet
/ Medical tests
/ Medicine
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ MSM (Men who have sex with men)
/ People and Places
/ Population studies
/ Public health
/ Randomization
/ Regional development
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Social aspects
/ Social entrepreneurship
/ Social organization
/ Social Sciences
/ Statistical models
/ Syphilis
/ Systematic review
/ Text messaging
/ Tropical diseases
/ Wedges
2018
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Crowdsourcing to expand HIV testing among men who have sex with men in China: A closed cohort stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
by
Liu, Aifeng
, Fu, Hongyun
, Li, Haochu
, Tang, Weiming
, Ong, Jason J.
, Ma, Wei
, Zhang, Ye
, Tucker, Joseph D.
, Wang, Cheng
, Li, Katherine T.
, Wu, Dan
, Yang, Ligang
, Huang, Wenting
, Mitchell, Kate M.
, Hudgens, Michael G.
, Vickerman, Peter
, Lu, Haidong
, Liao, Meizhen
, Wei, Chongyi
, Cao, Bolin
, Kang, Dianmin
, Liu, Chuncheng
, Smith, M. Kumi
, Zheng, Heping
, Yang, Bin
, Mollan, Katie R.
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Crowdsourcing
/ Dermatology
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Epidemiology
/ Global health
/ Health aspects
/ HIV
/ HIV tests
/ Hospitals
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Infectious diseases
/ Influence
/ Internet
/ Medical tests
/ Medicine
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ MSM (Men who have sex with men)
/ People and Places
/ Population studies
/ Public health
/ Randomization
/ Regional development
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Social aspects
/ Social entrepreneurship
/ Social organization
/ Social Sciences
/ Statistical models
/ Syphilis
/ Systematic review
/ Text messaging
/ Tropical diseases
/ Wedges
2018
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Crowdsourcing to expand HIV testing among men who have sex with men in China: A closed cohort stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
by
Liu, Aifeng
, Fu, Hongyun
, Li, Haochu
, Tang, Weiming
, Ong, Jason J.
, Ma, Wei
, Zhang, Ye
, Tucker, Joseph D.
, Wang, Cheng
, Li, Katherine T.
, Wu, Dan
, Yang, Ligang
, Huang, Wenting
, Mitchell, Kate M.
, Hudgens, Michael G.
, Vickerman, Peter
, Lu, Haidong
, Liao, Meizhen
, Wei, Chongyi
, Cao, Bolin
, Kang, Dianmin
, Liu, Chuncheng
, Smith, M. Kumi
, Zheng, Heping
, Yang, Bin
, Mollan, Katie R.
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Crowdsourcing
/ Dermatology
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Epidemiology
/ Global health
/ Health aspects
/ HIV
/ HIV tests
/ Hospitals
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Infectious diseases
/ Influence
/ Internet
/ Medical tests
/ Medicine
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ MSM (Men who have sex with men)
/ People and Places
/ Population studies
/ Public health
/ Randomization
/ Regional development
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Social aspects
/ Social entrepreneurship
/ Social organization
/ Social Sciences
/ Statistical models
/ Syphilis
/ Systematic review
/ Text messaging
/ Tropical diseases
/ Wedges
2018
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Crowdsourcing to expand HIV testing among men who have sex with men in China: A closed cohort stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
Journal Article
Crowdsourcing to expand HIV testing among men who have sex with men in China: A closed cohort stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
2018
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Overview
HIV testing rates are suboptimal among at-risk men. Crowdsourcing may be a useful tool for designing innovative, community-based HIV testing strategies to increase HIV testing. The purpose of this study was to use a stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the effect of a crowdsourced HIV intervention on HIV testing uptake among men who have sex with men (MSM) in eight Chinese cities.
An HIV testing intervention was developed through a national image contest, a regional strategy designathon, and local message contests. The final intervention included a multimedia HIV testing campaign, an online HIV testing service, and local testing promotion campaigns tailored for MSM. This intervention was evaluated using a closed cohort stepped wedge cluster RCT in eight Chinese cities (Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, and Jiangmen in Guangdong province; Jinan, Qingdao, Yantai, and Jining in Shandong province) from August 2016 to August 2017. MSM were recruited through Blued, a social networking mobile application for MSM, from July 29 to August 21 of 2016. The primary outcome was self-reported HIV testing in the past 3 months. Secondary outcomes included HIV self-testing, facility-based HIV testing, condom use, and syphilis testing. Generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) were used to analyze primary and secondary outcomes. We enrolled a total of 1,381 MSM. Most were ≤30 years old (82%), unmarried (86%), and had a college degree or higher (65%). The proportion of individuals receiving an HIV test during the intervention periods within a city was 8.9% (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.2-15.5) greater than during the control periods. In addition, the intention-to-treat analysis showed a higher probability of receiving an HIV test during the intervention periods as compared to the control periods (estimated risk ratio [RR] = 1.43, 95% CI 1.19-1.73). The intervention also increased HIV self-testing (RR = 1.89, 95% CI 1.50-2.38). There was no effect on facility-based HIV testing (RR = 1.00, 95% CI 0.79-1.26), condom use (RR = 1.00, 95% CI 0.86-1.17), or syphilis testing (RR = 0.92, 95% CI 0.70-1.21). A total of 48.6% (593/1,219) of participants reported that they received HIV self-testing. Among men who received two HIV tests, 32 individuals seroconverted during the 1-year study period. Study limitations include the use of self-reported HIV testing data among a subset of men and non-completion of the final survey by 23% of participants. Our study population was a young online group in urban China and the relevance of our findings to other populations will require further investigation.
In this setting, crowdsourcing was effective for developing and strengthening community-based HIV testing services for MSM. Crowdsourced interventions may be an important tool for the scale-up of HIV testing services among MSM in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC).
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02796963.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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