Mechanisms and pilot intervention for addressing intimate partner violence and HIV in antenatal care

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K01 · $163,256 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT This application to the National Institutes of Mental Health will provide Dr. Abigail Hatcher with five years K01 support for further training and mentored research. Dr. Hatcher is a social scientist at the University of North Carolina (UNC) with experience studying social drivers of HIV-related health. She has lived in South Africa since 2005, where she has established a solid career foundation for behavioral and social research around HIV and maternal health. The K01 award will provide essential training and professional scaffolding for a critical career transition, during which Dr. Hatcher will return to Chapel Hill after considerable time abroad to be an independent investigator and integral part of UNC Department of Health Behavior's global health research. Prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) programs are only effective if women take medication regularly, yet many perinatal women in sub-Saharan Africa have sup-optimal adherence. Intimate partner violence (IPV) worsens women's ability to adhere to antiretroviral therapy (ART), and leads to higher rates of depression. Dr. Hatcher proposes 3 aims, each linked to a robust career development plan advancing analytical, adaptation, and implementation science skills. First, she will lead secondary analysis of longitudinal cohort data to determine mechanisms linking IPV to HIV-related health outcomes (ART adherence, viremia), exploring a hypothesized pathway of mental health. Coursework and mentorship in statistics and epidemiology (Drs. Levin, Turan, B, and Myer) will support her analyses. Second, qualitative research with perinatal women and health workers will explore identified pathways and intervention ideas. Dr. Hatcher will systematically adapt evidence-based mental health programs, enhanced by site visits to Malawi and Zambia, and mentorship from IPV and mental health experts (Drs. Maman, Christofides, and Pence). Third, she will conduct a feasibility study to assess acceptability of intervention content, measures, and study conditions. In a quasi- experimental design, she will assign 2 inner-city Johannesburg clinics to intervention or enhanced standard of care conditions. Following 80 women in a prospective cohort will allow for preliminarily assessment of intervention effects on key pathways (perinatal depression and IPV) and refinement of HIV measures (ART adherence using drug levels in hair samples). The feasibility study will be underpinned by coursework in implementation research study design and intensive supervised practice from experts in implementation science for PMTCT (Drs. Turan, J, Brahmbhatt, and Chi). Overall, the research will provide preliminary results to inform design of a future trial testing an optimized lay health worker strategy. By supporting didactic and field-based learning and protected time for research, a K01 will advance Dr. Hatcher's career progression as an independent HIV behavioral scientist, leading to better health and wellbeing am...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10208681
Project number
5K01MH121185-03
Recipient
UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL
Principal Investigator
Abigail Mae Hatcher
Activity code
K01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$163,256
Award type
5
Project period
2019-07-15 → 2024-06-30