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Author Notes:

Gaëlle Sabben, MPH,Hubert Department of Global Health,Rollins School of Public Health Emory University,1518 Clifton Road,Atlanta, GA, 30322,United States.Phone:1 4046833103,Email: gaelle.sabben@emory.edu

We are grateful to Rob Breiman, Chris Obong’o, and David Schnabel for their contributions.

We also thank Stephen Munga, KEMRI Centre for Global Health Research director.

Authors declared no conflict of interest.

Subject:

Research Funding:

The research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health of the United States National Institutes of Health under Award Number 5R34MH106368 (PI: KW).

This research was also supported by the Emory Center for AIDS Research (P30 AI050409) ;and the Andrew W Mellon Foundation.

Keywords:

  • HIV
  • Kenya
  • mhealth
  • mobile phone
  • narrative
  • pilot test
  • prevention
  • randomized controlled trial
  • serious game
  • smartphone
  • sub-Saharan Africa
  • youth

A Smartphone Game to Prevent HIV Among Young Africans: Protocol for a Randomized Pilot Study of a Mobile Intervention.

Tools:

Journal Title:

JMIR Research Protocols

Volume:

Volume 8, Number 3

Publisher:

, Pages e11209-e11209

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Young people aged under 25 years make up an increasing proportion of the population in emerging economies such as Kenya, where half of new adult HIV infections are among 15- to 24-year olds. Interventions targeting this age group have the potential to avert HIV infections among an increasingly large at-risk population. Interactive communication technologies offer a promising platform for reaching young people in engaging ways. OBJECTIVE: Tumaini is a narrative-based smartphone game designed to help young Africans protect themselves from HIV. The objective of this study was to pilot test the game, focusing on the data needed to inform a future randomized controlled efficacy trial, including assessments of study feasibility and safety. METHODS: The study took place in Kisumu Town, western Kenya, in spring 2017. The game-based intervention was pilot tested for 16 days with a sample of 60 preadolescents aged 11 to 14 years. Participant recruitment was initiated through schools. Participants were randomly assigned to the control or intervention arms of the study. One parent for each of the intervention arm participants was also recruited (n=30). The intervention arm participants were provided with smartphones on which Tumaini was loaded so that they could play the game at home. Youth completed behavioral surveys at baseline, posttest, and 6-week follow-up. The intervention arm participants provided quantitative feedback on their experience of the game-based intervention at posttest. They and their parents further participated in postintervention focus group discussions. Feasibility-related study metrics were collected on recruitment, enrollment, attrition, safety of participants, and return of phones. RESULTS: Recruitment and enrollment of the 60 preadolescents and parents were successfully completed within 18 days. No participants were lost to follow-up: all youth completed all 3 waves of the survey and 27 intervention arm youth and 22 parents and caregivers participated in the focus groups. No safety concerns were reported. All phones were returned after the intervention period; none were damaged or lost. All intervention arm participants initiated gameplay, recording a mean exposure time just under 27 hours. CONCLUSIONS: Findings indicate that it is feasible and safe to test a smartphone-based HIV prevention intervention for very young adolescents in urban and peri-urban sub-Saharan Africa by initiating recruitment in schools and temporarily providing youth participants with smartphones on which the game is loaded. A randomized controlled trial powered to assess the efficacy of the game-based intervention is being designed to be carried out in the same geographic area as the pilot, using similar methods.

Copyright information:

©Gaëlle Sabben, Victor Akelo, Victor Mudhune, Ken Ondeng'e, Richard Ndivo, Rob Stephenson, Kate Winskell. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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