JMIR mHealth and uHealth (Feb 2020)

Protecting Men Who Have Sex With Men From HIV Infection With an mHealth App for Partner Notification: Observational Study

  • Yan, Xiangyu,
  • Lu, Zuhong,
  • Zhang, Bo,
  • Li, Yongjie,
  • Tang, Wenjun,
  • Zhang, Lingling,
  • Jia, Zhongwei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/14457
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. e14457

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundTraditional partner notification methods have been implemented for HIV-infected patients, as well as HIV treatment, in order to identify people at risk of HIV infection, especially men who have sex with men (MSM), since they are more likely to have casual sex partners. These traditional methods have some limitations. ObjectiveOur study focused on developing an mHealth app to improve partner notification in practice for MSM; the study then focused on evaluating the effects of the app. MethodsWe developed an mHealth app with different modules using Java and HTML5 and tested it in an MSM community to prevent HIV transmission. The HIV incidence stratified by different follow-up periods were calculated. Poisson regression and social networks were used to estimate the risk ratios and to identify the connection among MSM, respectively. ResultsIn addition to the partner notification module, which is the kernel of the app, we developed a test result self-query module to enable MSM to get their approved test results in a timely manner, a prompt and warning module to alert users to protect themselves from high-risk conditions, and a health education module to teach users more skills regarding HIV/AIDS prevention. Over a 1-year duration, a total of 3186 MSM used the app, of which 678 had at least two HIV test results since becoming app users; they were included in the final analysis. Among 678 users, a total of 6473 self-queries and 623 partner notifications were recorded, which identified 180 social networks of MSM app users. Those who used the partner notification function were more likely to have self-queries (P5 months vs ≤5 months: 2.22 per 100 person-years vs 6.99 per 100 person-years; risk ratio 0.32, 95% CI 0.12- 0.87). ConclusionsThe app developed in this study is consistent with the World Health Organization’s sensitivity and confidentiality recommendations; it has the potential to reduce the risk of HIV infection among MSM.