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Journal of Adolescent Health | 2015

Adolescent Self-Consent for Biomedical Human Immunodeficiency Virus Prevention Research

Amy Lewis Gilbert; Amelia S. Knopf; J. Dennis Fortenberry; Sybil Hosek; Bill G. Kapogiannis; Gregory D. Zimet

PURPOSE The Adolescent Medicine Trials Network Protocol 113 (ATN113) is an open-label, multisite demonstration project and Phase II safety study of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) preexposure prophylaxis with 15- to 17-year-old young men who have sex with men that requires adolescent consent for participation. The purpose of this study was to examine factors related to the process by which Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) and researchers made decisions regarding whether to approve and implement ATN113 so as to inform future biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations. METHODS Participants included 17 researchers at 13 sites in 12 states considering ATN113 implementation. Qualitative descriptive methods were used. Data sources included interviews and documents generated during the initiation process. RESULTS A common process for initiating ATN113 emerged, and informants described how they identified and addressed practical, ethical, and legal challenges that arose. Informants described the process as responding to the protocol, preparing for IRB submission, abstaining from or proceeding with submission, responding to IRB concerns, and reacting to the outcomes. A complex array of factors impacting approval and implementation were identified, and ATN113 was ultimately implemented in seven of 13 sites. Informants also reflected on lessons learned that may help inform future biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations. CONCLUSIONS The results illustrate factors for consideration in determining whether to implement such trials, demonstrate that such protocols have the potential to be approved, and highlight a need for clearer standards regarding biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2016

Finding the Patient's Voice Using Big Data: Analysis of Users' Health-Related Concerns in the ChaCha Question-and-Answer Service (2009-2012).

Chad Priest; Amelia S. Knopf; Doyle Groves; Janet S. Carpenter; Christopher Furrey; Anand Krishnan; Wendy R. Miller; Julie L. Otte; Mathew J. Palakal; Sarah E. Wiehe; Jeffrey S. Wilson

Background The development of effective health care and public health interventions requires a comprehensive understanding of the perceptions, concerns, and stated needs of health care consumers and the public at large. Big datasets from social media and question-and-answer services provide insight into the public’s health concerns and priorities without the financial, temporal, and spatial encumbrances of more traditional community-engagement methods and may prove a useful starting point for public-engagement health research (infodemiology). Objective The objective of our study was to describe user characteristics and health-related queries of the ChaCha question-and-answer platform, and discuss how these data may be used to better understand the perceptions, concerns, and stated needs of health care consumers and the public at large. Methods We conducted a retrospective automated textual analysis of anonymous user-generated queries submitted to ChaCha between January 2009 and November 2012. A total of 2.004 billion queries were read, of which 3.50% (70,083,796/2,004,243,249) were missing 1 or more data fields, leaving 1.934 billion complete lines of data for these analyses. Results Males and females submitted roughly equal numbers of health queries, but content differed by sex. Questions from females predominantly focused on pregnancy, menstruation, and vaginal health. Questions from males predominantly focused on body image, drug use, and sexuality. Adolescents aged 12–19 years submitted more queries than any other age group. Their queries were largely centered on sexual and reproductive health, and pregnancy in particular. Conclusions The private nature of the ChaCha service provided a perfect environment for maximum frankness among users, especially among adolescents posing sensitive health questions. Adolescents’ sexual health queries reveal knowledge gaps with serious, lifelong consequences. The nature of questions to the service provides opportunities for rapid understanding of health concerns and may lead to development of more effective tailored interventions.


AJOB empirical bioethics | 2017

Moral conflict and competing duties in the initiation of a biomedical HIV prevention trial with minor adolescents

Amelia S. Knopf; Amy Lewis Gilbert; Gregory D. Zimet; Bill G. Kapogiannis; Sybil Hosek; J. Dennis Fortenberry; Mary A. Ott; Aids Interventions

ABSTRACT Background: Biomedical HIV prevention research with minors is complicated by the requirement of parental consent, which may disclose sensitive information to parents. We examine the experience of principal investigators (PIs) and study personnel who faced this complex ethical issue in the first biomedical HIV prevention study that allowed minors to self-consent for enrollment. Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with PIs and study personnel from 13 medical trial sites in cities across the United States. Data were analyzed using a conventional content analysis. Results: Participants experienced moral conflict as they struggled to fulfill conflicting duties in this trial involving minor adolescents with multiple vulnerabilities. Our participants experienced conflict between the two types of duties—protective and scientific—previously identified by Merritt. Protective duties were owed to the child, the parents, and the institution, and participants expressed tension between the actions that would protect these subgroups and the actions necessary to fulfill their scientific duties. Conclusions: Moral conflict was resolved in a variety of ways, including reflecting on the protocols alignment with federal regulations, modifying consent language, considering each individual for enrollment carefully, and accepting institutional review board (IRB) decisions. Potential solutions for future studies are discussed, and include flexible protocol consent procedures and centralized IRB reviews.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Sexual learning among East African adolescents in the context of generalized HIV epidemics: A systematic qualitative meta-synthesis.

Amelia S. Knopf; Kim R. McNealy; Halima Al-Khattab; Lisa Carter-Harris; Ukamaka M. Oruche; Violet Naanyu; Claire Burke Draucker

Background AIDS-related illness is the leading cause of mortality for adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa. Together, Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda account for 21% of HIV-infected adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa. The United Nations framework for addressing the epidemic among adolescents calls for comprehensive sexual and reproductive health education. These HIV prevention efforts could be informed by a synthesis of existing research about the formal and informal sexual education of adolescents in countries experiencing generalized epidemics. The purpose of this study was to describe the process of sexual learning among East African adolescents living in the context of generalized HIV epidemics. Methods Qualitative metasynthesis, a systematic procedure for integrating the results of multiple qualitative studies addressing a similar phenomenon, was used. Thirty-two research reports met study inclusion criteria. The reports were assessed in a four-step analytic process: appraisal, classification of findings, synthesis of findings, and construction of a framework depicting the process of sexual learning in this population. Results The framework includes three phases of sexual learning: 1) being primed for sex, 2) making sense of sex, and 3) having sexual experiences. Adolescents were primed for sex through gender norms, cultural practices, and economic structures as well as through conversations and formal instruction. They made sense of sex by acquiring information about sexual intercourse, reproduction and pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections, and relationships and by developing a variety of beliefs and attitudes about these topics. Some adolescents described having sexual experiences that met wants or needs, but many experienced sex that was coerced or violent. Whether sex was wanted, coerced, or violent, adolescents experienced worry about sexually transmitted infections or premarital pregnancy. Conclusions The three phases of sexual learning interact to shape adolescents’ sexual lives and their risk for HIV infection. This framework will contribute to the development of sexual education programs that address HIV risk within the broader context of sexual learning.


Social Science & Medicine | 2014

This is the medicine: A Kenyan community responds to a sexual concurrency reduction intervention

Amelia S. Knopf; Kawango Agot; John E. Sidle; Violet Naanyu; Martina Morris


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2017

Minors' and Young Adults' Experiences of the Research Consent Process in a Phase II Safety Study of Pre-exposure Prophylaxis for HIV

Amelia S. Knopf; Mary A. Ott; Nancy Liu; Bill G. Kapogiannis; Gregory D. Zimet; J. Dennis Fortenberry; Sybil Hosek


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Experiences of Adolescent Participants in a Biomedical HIV Prevention Trial

Amelia S. Knopf; Mary A. Ott; Nancy Liu; Bill G. Kapogiannis; Gregory D. Zimet; J. Dennis Fortenberry; Sybil Hosek


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2016

Adolescents’ Anonymous Sexual Health Queries to the ChaCha Question and Answer Service

Amelia S. Knopf; Doyle Groves; Wendy R. Miller; Dennis Fortenberry; Chad Priest


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

The Parental Monitoring Scale: Psychometric Properties and Implications for Use with Diverse Samples in North America

Shannon Wilson; Gregory D. Zimet; Amelia S. Knopf


Publisher | 2017

Sexual learning among East African adolescents in the context of generalized HIV epidemics: A systematic qualitative meta-synthesis

Amelia S. Knopf; Kim R. McNealy; Halima Al-Khattab; Lisa Carter-Harris; Ukamaka M. Oruche; Violet Naanyu; Claire Burke Draucker

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Bill G. Kapogiannis

National Institutes of Health

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Doyle Groves

Indiana University Bloomington

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