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ISA ASSOCIATES INC SBIR Phase II Award, August 2019

A SBIR Phase II contract was awarded to ISA ASSOCIATES INC in August, 2019 for $681,047.0 USD from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and National Institutes of Health.

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sbir.gov/node/1683653
Is a
SBIR/STTR Awards
SBIR/STTR Awards

SBIR/STTR Award attributes

SBIR/STTR Award Recipient
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ISA ASSOCIATES INC
0
Government Agency
0
Government Branch
National Institutes of Health
National Institutes of Health
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Award Type
SBIR0
Contract Number (US Government)
2R44MH117837-020
Award Phase
Phase II0
Award Amount (USD)
681,0470
Date Awarded
August 2, 2019
0
End Date
January 31, 2022
0
Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACTOne in five transgender women (TGW) in the U.S. is infected with HIV. The burden is particularly onerous for African Americans. While 16% of U.S. TGW are Black, over half of all new cases in TGW from 2009-2014 were among African Americans. Further, African American TGW experience a complex interaction of racism, sexism, and transphobia that leads to health disparities across the entire spectrum of HIV-related outcomes.Despite the clear need for effective HIV resources for African American TGW, no CDC-defined evidence- based interventions (EBIs) exist for this group. We intend to meet this need with Shine, a culturally-tailored, theoretically-driven mobile intervention for Black TGW. The Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills (IMB) model will guide the development of behavior change messages tailored to a user’s HIV status. Beyond information, motivation, and skills, a unique socio-cultural context also influences TGW’s ability to perform HIV-related behaviors. To account for this, we will contextualize the IMB-based HIV content by addressing a key intrapsychic need among Black TGW: gender affirmation. According to the Model of Gender Affirmation, a need for gender identity validation often leads TGW to engage in behaviors that are counter to HIV prevention and treatment goals. To further improve HIV outcomes, Shine will reduce barriers to HIV behaviors caused by gender affirmation needs and empower Black TGW to affirm their gender in healthier ways.Shine will be the first mobile intervention for African American TGW that is theory-based, individually- tailored, and empowering. All users will receive HIV-related informational, motivational, and skill-building text messages. Additional messaging will provide strategies for gaining gender affirmation. These text messages will be supplemented by three types of web-based videos: scripted vignettes, unscripted peer narratives, and educational instruction. Links to these videos will be integrated into the messaging and will enhance the trans- specific understanding of gender affirmation within our IMB framework. An innovative theory-based HIV behavioral intervention designed to overcome the unique barriers facing African American TGW; that addresses elements across the entire HIV care continuum; that is delivered in a way that empowers, educates, and engages a stigmatized population; and that relies on a technology that is part of the everyday lives of target end-users has the significant potential to meaningfully reduce HIV disparities.The results of Phase I strongly support the feasibility and potential effectiveness of the program – far exceeding the usability benchmarks established in the Phase I proposal. In Phase II, we will complete development of Shine and test its effectiveness in a randomized controlled trial with 215 African American TGW. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either Shine or mobile HIV education materials. Before and 6 months after random assignment participants’ composite risk for HIV transmission, HIV preventive and treatment behaviors, barriers to those behaviors, and gender affirmation needs will be assessed.PROJECT NARRATIVE This project aims to develop a culturally-tailored mHealth HIV behavioral intervention for African American transgender women. It will allow clinics and community-based organizations to provide an empowering, empirically-validated, and mobile HIV behavioral intervention to their transgender clients without creating additional demands on their already overburdened staff. The information and skills contained within this intervention will help African American transgender women of any HIV status (HIV-negative, HIV-positive, or unknown) achieve better HIV-related health outcomes.

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