Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (Oct 2021)

Development and Cultural Adaptation of a Computer-Delivered and Multi-Component Alcohol Reduction Intervention for Russian Women Living with HIV and HCV

  • Jennifer L. Brown PhD,
  • Iakovos Anastasakis MD,
  • Natalia Revzina MD, MPH,
  • Ariadna Capasso MFA,
  • Ekaterina Boeva MD,
  • Vadim Rassokhin MD, PhD,
  • Adrienne Crusey BSH,
  • Jessica M. Sales PhD,
  • Anthony Hitch MA,
  • Tiffaney Renfro MSW,
  • Ralph J. DiClemente PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23259582211044920
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20

Abstract

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Background: There is elevated prevalence of problem drinking among Russian women living with HIV and HCV co-infection. This paper describes the development and cultural adaptation of a multi-component alcohol reduction intervention incorporating a brief, computer-delivered module for Russian women living with HIV and HCV co-infection. Methods: The format and content of the intervention were adapted to be linguistic-, cultural-, and gender-appropriate using the ADAPT-ITT framework. A computer-delivered module and brief clinician-delivered individual and telephone sessions were developed. Results: We describe the theoretical foundations of the intervention, the cultural adaptation of the intervention, and overview the content of the intervention’s multiple components. Discussion: Interventions to reduce alcohol use that can be integrated within Russian HIV treatment centers are urgently needed. If efficacious, the culturally-adapted intervention offers the promise of a cost-effective, easily disseminated intervention approach for Russian women living with HIV/HCV co-infection engaging in problematic alcohol use.