Background: Telehealth methods, including video chat counseling, have been growing in popularity within the behavioral health counseling field for over a decade. While video-based counseling methods have been shown to be effective and convenient, they have unique challenges stemming from the technology they use. Technical challenges can negatively impact appointment flow, intervention effectiveness, and the satisfaction of both patients and clinicians. Methodology: The Y2TEC (Youth to Text or Telehealth for Engagement in HIV Care) study is a pilot randomized control trial examining the feasibility and acceptability of a video counseling series provided to young adults (ages 18-29) living with HIV. The study's clinicians provided about 500 video-based counseling sessions through the Zoom videoconferencing platform. The study team then developed recommendations for overcoming technical challenges through a review of the best practice literature, insights from the clinicians and study coordinator, engaging in consultations during supervision meetings, receiving verbal feedback from participants, and reviewing logs of technical challenges. Results: Through our experience, we have found that quality of video-based counseling services can be greatly improved with minor intentional technological modifications in preparation and provision of services. We provide an overview of common challenges and corresponding recommendations to address them. Conclusion: This article can help clinicians improve their quality of telehealth sessions by identifying several common technological challenges that can occur during video chat sessions, exploring the impact of these challenges on ses-sion dynamics and providing concise, best practice-based recommendations to mitigate these issues that clinicians face.
The elimination of health and other disparities requires high quality and methodologically sound research on racial/ethnic minorities. Despite a general consensus on the need for valid research on racial/ethnic minorities, few guidelines are available. This article contributes to closing this gap by discussing examples and strategies for addressing concrete issues that researchers may face during these stages of the scientific process: planning and literature review (identifying meaningful gaps and appropriate theoretical perspectives), design (caveats of race-comparison, selection of appropriate terminology), measurement (measurement equivalence, effects of ethnicity of the interviewer/coder), recruitment (barriers and strategies to facilitate recruitment), data analysis (use of norms derived from other groups, hazards of combining ethnic groups in the analyses), and dissemination of study findings to professional and lay audiences. Applying appropriate methodology will result in research that may impact disparities.
Background
Opioid use and opioid-related overdose continue to rise among racial/ethnic minorities. Social determinants of health negatively impact these communities, possibly resulting in poorer treatment outcomes. Research is needed to investigate how to overcome the disproportionate and deleterious impact of social determinants of health on treatment entry, retention, drug use and related outcomes among racial/ethnic minorities. The current commentary provides recommendations that may help researchers respond more effectively to reducing health disparities in substance use treatment.
We begin with recommendations of best research practices (e.g., ensuring adequate recruitment of racial/ethnic minorities in research, central components of valid analysis, and adequate methods for assessing effect sizes for racial/ethnic minorities). Then, we propose that more NIDA research focuses on issues disproportionately affecting racial/ethnic minorities. Next, techniques for increasing the number of underrepresented racial/ethnic treatment researchers are suggested. We then recommend methods for infusing racial/ethnic expertise onto funding decision panels. This commentary ends with a case study that features NIDA’s National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN).
Conclusions
The proposed recommendations can serve as guidelines for substance use research funders to promote research that has the potential to reduce racial/ethnic disparities in substance use treatment and to increase training opportunities for racial/ethnic minority researchers.
Background:
Substance use and mental health are two barriers to engagement in care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence among youth and young adults living with HIV (YLWH). The consequences of suboptimal adherence in YLWH are increased risk of HIV transmission and a future generation of immunodeficient adults with drug-resistant virus.
Methods:
The Youth to Telehealth and Texting for Engagement in Care (Y2TEC) study was a pilot randomized crossover trial that examined the feasibility and acceptability of a novel video-counseling series and accompanying text messages aimed at mental health, substance use, and HIV care engagement for YLWH. The intervention consisted of twelve 20–30-min weekly video-counseling sessions focused on identifying and addressing barriers to HIV care, mental health, and substance use challenges. Participants completed quantitative surveys at baseline, 4 months, and 8 months. Feasibility and acceptability were evaluated using prespecified benchmarks.
Results:
Fifty YLWH aged 18–29 years living in the San Francisco Bay Area were enrolled. Eighty-six percent and 75% of participants were retained at 4 and 8 months, respectively. A total of 455 (76%) video-counseling sessions were completed. In 82% of sessions, participants responded that they strongly agreed/agreed with this statement: “I felt heard, understood, and respected by the counselor.” In 81% of sessions, participants responded that they strongly agreed/agreed with this statement: “Overall, today's session was right for me.” At baseline, among participants reporting mental health challenges, only 10% noted having ever received mental health services, and among those who reported substance use challenges, ∼19% reported ever receiving substance use services. After 4 months of the Y2TEC intervention, participants reported slightly higher ART adherence and HIV knowledge, decreased depression and anxiety, and reduced stigma related to mental health and substance use.
Conclusions:
The Y2TEC intervention using video-counseling and text messaging was feasible and acceptable for YLWH.
ID: NCT03681145
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