Proof of Concept for the FLEX Intervention: Feasibility of Home Based Coaching to Improve Physical Activity Outcomes and Viral Load Suppression among African American Youth Living with HIV.
Henna BudhwaniMaurice BullsSylvie NaarPublished in: Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (2021)
FLEX is a Motivational Interviewing, home-based coaching program that concurrently targets HIV-related and physical activity goals among African American youth living with HIV in the United States. To create and pilot test FLEX, we leveraged a 2-step exploratory sequential mixed methods design informed by the ORBIT model with initial qualitative work followed by pre-post analysis of quantitative outcomes, concluding with qualitative exit surveys. Data were evaluated pre- and 3-months post-intervention. Recruitment was 90%. Participants reported high program satisfaction and program adherence (76% completion rate). Preliminary findings indicate reductions in participants' viral loads and improvements across 4 measures of physical activity.
Keyphrases
- african american
- physical activity
- quality improvement
- randomized controlled trial
- body mass index
- study protocol
- hiv infected
- sars cov
- systematic review
- sleep quality
- antiretroviral therapy
- hepatitis c virus
- young adults
- hiv positive
- electronic health record
- hiv aids
- high resolution
- public health
- depressive symptoms
- skeletal muscle
- weight loss
- hiv testing
- south africa
- deep learning
- mass spectrometry