The Effect of a Life-Stage Based Intervention on Depression in Youth Living with HIV in Kenya and Uganda: Results from the SEARCH-Youth Trial
Florence Mwangwa, Jason Johnson-Peretz, James Peng, Laura B. Balzer, Janice Litunya, Janet Nakigudde, Douglas Black, Lawrence Owino, Cecilia Akatukwasa, Anjeline Onyango, Fredrick Atwine, Titus O. Arunga, James Ayieko, Moses R. Kamya, Diane Havlir, Carol S. Camlin, Theodore Ruel

TL;DR
A life-stage-based care model reduced depression in HIV-positive youth in Kenya and Uganda compared to standard care.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that an integrated care model reduces depressive symptoms in youth with HIV.
Findings
The intervention arm had a 28% lower risk of depressive symptoms compared to the control arm.
Supportive counseling improved confidence and coping skills among participants.
Predictors of depression included pressure to have sex, physical threats, and major life events.
Abstract
Depression among adolescents and young adults with HIV affects both their wellbeing and clinical care outcomes. Integrated care models are needed. We hypothesized that the SEARCH-Youth intervention, a life-stage-based care model that improved viral suppression, would reduce depressive symptoms as compared to the standard of care. We conducted a mixed-methods study of youth with HIV aged 15–24 years in SEARCH-Youth, a cluster-randomized trial in rural Uganda and Kenya (NCT03848728). Depression was assessed cross-sectionally with the PHQ-9 screening tool and compared by arm using targeted minimum loss-based estimation. In-depth semi-structured interviews with young participants, family members, and providers were analyzed using a modified framework of select codes pertaining to depression. We surveyed 1,234 participants (median age 21 years, 80% female). Having any depressive symptoms was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Poverty, Education, and Child Welfare
