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Background: Inclusion of youth (10-24 years) living with HIV (YLWH) in clinical
research is critical to addressing their unique vulnerabilities and improving care
outcomes. Examining the role of trust and relationship building in research
decision-making is critical to designing ethical recruitment and engagement
strategies.
Methods: We conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with YLWH (10-24
years, enrolled in HIV care at Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare
(AMPATH) in western Kenya), caregivers (parents and guardians) of YLWH, and
other subject matter experts (SMEs). Interviews focused on barriers, facilitators,
and strategies to improve participant-researcher trust and relationship building,
with a particular focus on recruitment and engagement strategies. Interviews were
conducted with 99 participants (53% male): 40 YLWH [median age 17.5, (range 11-
24), 50% female], 20 caregivers of enrolled YLWH (70% female), and 39 SMEs
(33% female; 46% community leaders, 26% healthcare providers, 15% clinical
researchers, 8% social scientists, 3% international research experts, 2% laboratory
experts).
Results: All groups indicated trust could be built and broken through research
processes. YLWH and SMEs viewed participant identification and study
recruitment through medical records as a violation of trust, indicating that their
HIV status and health information should remain confidential between themselves
and their clinical team. All groups preferred recruitment through existing clinician-
YLWH relationships, emphasizing the importance of privacy and confidentially; this
strategy was viewed as stronger and more ethical. Losses of confidentiality and
mistakes in sample collection that require participants to attend additional,
unnecessary research visits or provide additional samples were identified by all
groups as additional barriers to relationship-building. YLWH and caregivers
discussed researcher characteristics that support relationship-building,
emphasizing the importance of positive demeanors and non-stigmatizing behaviors
by research personnel. YLWH and SMEs discussed operational needs that foster
relationship-building, including proper communication about study procedures,
reliably reporting results to participants, and receiving future benefits.
Conclusions: Trusting participant-researcher relationships plays an important
role in YLWH research decision making and greatly influence the development of
ethical recruitment strategies. Study participants highlighted more appropriate
and ethical recruitment strategies, stemming from strong participant-researcher
relationships. |
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