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Featured researches published by Greg Szekeres.


AIDS | 2008

Stigma in the HIV/AIDS epidemic: A review of the literature and recommendations for the way forward

Anish P. Mahajan; Jennifer N. Sayles; Vishal A Patel; Robert H. Remien; Sharif Sawires; Daniel J Ortiz; Greg Szekeres; Thomas J. Coates

Although stigma is considered a major barrier to effective responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, stigma reduction efforts are relegated to the bottom of AIDS programme priorities. The complexity of HIV/AIDS-related stigma is often cited as a primary reason for the limited response to this pervasive phenomenon. In this paper, we systematically review the scientific literature on HIV/AIDS-related stigma to document the current state of research, identify gaps in the available evidence and highlight promising strategies to address stigma. We focus on the following key challenges: defining, measuring and reducing HIV/AIDS-related stigma as well as assessing the impact of stigma on the effectiveness of HIV prevention and treatment programmes. Based on the literature, we conclude by offering a set of recommendations that may represent important next steps in a multifaceted response to stigma in the HIV/AIDS epidemic.


The Lancet | 2007

Male circumcision and HIV/AIDS: challenges and opportunities

Sharif Sawires; Shari L. Dworkin; Agnès Fiamma; Dean Peacock; Greg Szekeres; Thomas J. Coates

2enrolled in the respective studies. The Kenya and Uganda trials replicated the landmark fi ndings of the South African Orange Farm study, the fi rst randomised controlled trial to report a greater than 50% protective benefi t of male circumcision. 3 Before the availability of data from these three African randomised controlled trials, multiple observational studies correlated male circumcision with reduced risk of HIV infection. 4–9 Systematic reviews and meta-analysis of observational studies provide further evidence of the association of male circumcision with reduced risk of HIV infection 10–12 and a plausible explanation for the biological mechanism for reduced risk of infection has been suggested. 13 Recently released longitudinal evidence of the range of health benefi ts that male circumcision provides, 14


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2013

Social Networking Technologies as an Emerging Tool for HIV Prevention: A Cluster Randomized Trial

Sean D. Young; William G. Cumberland; Sung-Jae Lee; Devan Jaganath; Greg Szekeres; Thomas D. Coates

BACKGROUND Social networking technologies are an emerging tool for HIV prevention. OBJECTIVE To determine whether social networking communities can increase HIV testing among African American and Latino men who have sex with men (MSM). DESIGN Randomized, controlled trial with concealed allocation. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01701206). SETTING Online. PATIENTS 112 MSM based in Los Angeles, more than 85% of whom were African American or Latino. INTERVENTION Sixteen peer leaders were randomly assigned to deliver information about HIV or general health to participants via Facebook groups over 12 weeks. After participants accepted a request to join the group, participation was voluntary. Group participation and engagement were monitored. Participants could request a free, home-based HIV testing kit and completed questionnaires at baseline and 12-week follow-up. MEASUREMENTS Participant acceptance of and engagement in the intervention and social network participation, rates of home-based HIV testing, and sexual risk behaviors. RESULTS Almost 95% of intervention participants and 73% of control participants voluntarily communicated using the social platform. Twenty-five of 57 intervention participants (44%) requested home-based HIV testing kits compared with 11 of 55 control participants (20%) (difference, 24 percentage points [95% CI, 8 to 41 percentage points]). Nine of the 25 intervention participants (36%) who requested the test took it and mailed it back compared with 2 of the 11 control participants (18%) who requested the test. Retention at study follow-up was more than 93%. LIMITATION Only 2 Facebook communities were included for each group. CONCLUSION Social networking communities are acceptable and effective tools to increase home-based HIV testing among at-risk populations. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE National Institute of Mental Health.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2013

Social networking technologies as emerging tools for HIV prevention: A Cluster Randomized Trial

Sean D. Young; William G. Cumberland; Sung-Jae Lee; Devan Jaganath; Greg Szekeres; Thomas D. Coates

BACKGROUND Social networking technologies are an emerging tool for HIV prevention. OBJECTIVE To determine whether social networking communities can increase HIV testing among African American and Latino men who have sex with men (MSM). DESIGN Randomized, controlled trial with concealed allocation. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01701206). SETTING Online. PATIENTS 112 MSM based in Los Angeles, more than 85% of whom were African American or Latino. INTERVENTION Sixteen peer leaders were randomly assigned to deliver information about HIV or general health to participants via Facebook groups over 12 weeks. After participants accepted a request to join the group, participation was voluntary. Group participation and engagement were monitored. Participants could request a free, home-based HIV testing kit and completed questionnaires at baseline and 12-week follow-up. MEASUREMENTS Participant acceptance of and engagement in the intervention and social network participation, rates of home-based HIV testing, and sexual risk behaviors. RESULTS Almost 95% of intervention participants and 73% of control participants voluntarily communicated using the social platform. Twenty-five of 57 intervention participants (44%) requested home-based HIV testing kits compared with 11 of 55 control participants (20%) (difference, 24 percentage points [95% CI, 8 to 41 percentage points]). Nine of the 25 intervention participants (36%) who requested the test took it and mailed it back compared with 2 of the 11 control participants (18%) who requested the test. Retention at study follow-up was more than 93%. LIMITATION Only 2 Facebook communities were included for each group. CONCLUSION Social networking communities are acceptable and effective tools to increase home-based HIV testing among at-risk populations. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE National Institute of Mental Health.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2010

HIV-related stigma, social norms, and HIV testing in Soweto and Vulindlela, South Africa: National Institutes of Mental Health Project Accept (HPTN 043).

Sean D. Young; Zdenek Hlavka; Precious Modiba; Glenda Gray; Heidi van Rooyen; Linda Richter; Greg Szekeres; Thomas J. Coates

Objective:HIV testing is necessary to curb the increasing epidemic. However, HIV-related stigma and perceptions of low likelihood of societal HIV testing may reduce testing rates. This study aimed to explore this association in South Africa, where HIV rates are extraordinarily high. Methods:Data were taken from the Soweto and Vulindlela, South African sites of Project Accept, a multinational HIV prevention trial. Self-reported HIV testing, stigma, and social norms items were used to study the relationship between HIV testing, stigma, and perceptions about societal testing rates. The stigma items were broken into 3 factors: negative attitudes, negative perceptions about people living with HIV, and perceptions of fair treatment for people living with HIV (equity). Results:Results from a univariate logistic regression suggest that history of HIV testing was associated with decreased negative attitudes about people living with HIV/AIDS, increased perceptions that people living with HIV/AIDS experience discrimination, and increased perceptions that people with HIV should be treated equitably. Results from a multivariate logistic regression confirm these effects and suggest that these differences vary according to sex and age. Compared with people who had never tested for HIV, those who had previously tested were more likely to believe that the majority of people have tested for HIV. Conclusions:Data suggest that interventions designed to increase HIV testing in South Africa should address stigma and perceptions of societal testing.


The Lancet Global Health | 2014

Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial

Thomas J. Coates; Michal Kulich; David D. Celentano; Carla Zelaya; Suwat Chariyalertsak; Alfred Chingono; Glenda E. Gray; Jessie Mbwambo; Stephen F. Morin; Linda Richter; Michael D. Sweat; Heidi van Rooyen; Nuala McGrath; Agnès Fiamma; Oliver Laeyendecker; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Greg Szekeres; Deborah Donnell; Susan H. Eshleman

BACKGROUND Although several interventions have shown reduced HIV incidence in clinical trials, the community-level effect of effective interventions on the epidemic when scaled up is unknown. We investigated whether a multicomponent, multilevel social and behavioural prevention strategy could reduce HIV incidence, increase HIV testing, reduce HIV risk behaviour, and change social and behavioural norms. METHODS For this phase 3 cluster-randomised controlled trial, 34 communities in four sites in Africa and 14 communities in Thailand were randomly allocated in matched pairs to receive 36 months of community-based voluntary counselling and testing for HIV (intervention group) or standard counselling and testing alone (control group) between January, 2001, and December, 2011. The intervention was designed to make testing more accessible in communities, engage communities through outreach, and provide support services after testing. Randomisation was done by a computer-generated code and was not masked. Data were collected at baseline (n=14 567) and after intervention (n=56.683) by cross-sectional random surveys of community residents aged 18-32 years. The primary outcome was HIV incidence and was estimated with a cross-sectional multi-assay algorithm and antiretroviral drug screening assay. Thailand was excluded from incidence analyses because of low HIV prevalence. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00203749. FINDINGS The estimated incidence of HIV in the intervention group was 1.52% versus 1.81% in the control group with an estimated reduction in HIV incidence of 13.9% (relative risk [RR] 0.86, 95% CI 0.73-1.02; p=0.082). HIV incidence was significantly reduced in women older than 24 years (RR=0.70, 0.54-0.90; p=0.0085), but not in other age or sex subgroups. Community-based voluntary counselling and testing increased testing rates by 25% overall (12-39; p=0.0003), by 45% (25-69; p<0·0001) in men and 15% (3-28; p=0.013) in women. No overall effect on sexual risk behaviour was recorded. Social norms regarding HIV testing were improved by 6% (95% CI 3-9) in communities in the intervention group. INTERPRETATION These results are sufficiently robust, especially when taking into consideration the combined results of modest reductions in HIV incidence combined with increases in HIV testing and reductions in HIV risk behaviour, to recommend the Project Accept approach as an integral part of all interventions (including treatment as prevention) to reduce HIV transmission at the community level. FUNDING US National Institute of Mental Health, the Division of AIDS of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Office of AIDS Research of the US National Institutes of Health.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Relationship between Online Social Networking and Sexual Risk Behaviors among Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM)

Sean D. Young; Greg Szekeres; Thomas J. Coates

Online social networking usage is growing rapidly, especially among at-risk populations, such as men who have sex with men (MSM). However, little research has studied the relationship between online social networking usage and sexual risk behaviors among at-risk populations. One hundred and eighteen Facebook-registered MSM (60.1% Latino, 28% African American; 11.9% other) were recruited from online (social networking websites and banner advertisements) and offline (local clinics, restaurants and organizations) venues frequented by minority MSM. Inclusion criteria required participants to be men who were 18 years of age or older, had had sex with a man in the past 12 months, were living in Los Angeles, and had a Facebook account. Participants completed an online survey on their social media usage and sexual risk behaviors. Results from a multivariable regression suggest that number of sexual partners met from online social networking technologies is associated with increased: 1) likelihood of having exchanged sex for food, drugs, or a place to stay within the past 3 months; 2) number of new partners within the past 3 months; 3) number of male sex partners within the past 3 months; and 4) frequency of engaging in oral sex within the past 3 months, controlling for age, race, education, and total number of sexual partners. Understanding the relationship between social media sex-seeking and sexual risk behaviors among at-risk populations will help inform population-focused HIV prevention and treatment interventions.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Estimation of HIV incidence in a large, community-based, randomized clinical trial: NIMH project accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043).

Oliver Laeyendecker; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Agnès Fiamma; Michal Kulich; Deborah Donnell; Deb Bassuk; Caroline E. Mullis; Craig Chin; Priscilla Swanson; John Hackett; William Clarke; Mark A. Marzinke; Greg Szekeres; Glenda E. Gray; Linda Richter; Michel W. Alexandre; Suwat Chariyalertsak; Alfred Chingono; David D. Celentano; Stephen F. Morin; Michael D. Sweat; Thomas J. Coates; Susan H. Eshleman

Background National Institute of Mental Health Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network [HPTN] 043) is a large, Phase III, community-randomized, HIV prevention trial conducted in 48 matched communities in Africa and Thailand. The study intervention included enhanced community-based voluntary counseling and testing. The primary endpoint was HIV incidence, assessed in a single, cross-sectional, post-intervention survey of >50,000 participants. Methods HIV rapid tests were performed in-country. HIV status was confirmed at a central laboratory in the United States. HIV incidence was estimated using a multi-assay algorithm (MAA) that included the BED capture immunoassay, an avidity assay, CD4 cell count, and HIV viral load. Results Data from Thailand was not used in the endpoint analysis because HIV prevalence was low. Overall, 7,361 HIV infections were identified (4 acute, 3 early, and 7,354 established infections). Samples from established infections were analyzed using the MAA; 467 MAA positive samples were identified; 29 of those samples were excluded because they contained antiretroviral drugs. HIV prevalence was 16.5% (range at study sites: 5.93% to 30.8%). HIV incidence was 1.60% (range at study sites: 0.78% to 3.90%). Conclusions In this community-randomized trial, a MAA was used to estimate HIV incidence in a single, cross-sectional post-intervention survey. Results from this analysis were subsequently used to compare HIV incidence in the control and intervention communities. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00203749


PLOS ONE | 2013

Development of Methods for Cross-Sectional HIV Incidence Estimation in a Large, Community Randomized Trial

Oliver Laeyendecker; Michal Kulich; Deborah Donnell; Arnošt Komárek; Marek Omelka; Caroline E. Mullis; Greg Szekeres; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Agnès Fiamma; Ronald H. Gray; Tom Lutalo; Charles S. Morrison; Robert A. Salata; Tsungai Chipato; Connie Celum; Erin M. Kahle; Taha E. Taha; Newton Kumwenda; Quarraisha Abdool Karim; Vivek Naranbhai; Jairam R. Lingappa; Michael D. Sweat; Thomas D. Coates; Susan H. Eshleman

Background Accurate methods of HIV incidence determination are critically needed to monitor the epidemic and determine the population level impact of prevention trials. One such trial, Project Accept, a Phase III, community-randomized trial, evaluated the impact of enhanced, community-based voluntary counseling and testing on population-level HIV incidence. The primary endpoint of the trial was based on a single, cross-sectional, post-intervention HIV incidence assessment. Methods and Findings Test performance of HIV incidence determination was evaluated for 403 multi-assay algorithms [MAAs] that included the BED capture immunoassay [BED-CEIA] alone, an avidity assay alone, and combinations of these assays at different cutoff values with and without CD4 and viral load testing on samples from seven African cohorts (5,325 samples from 3,436 individuals with known duration of HIV infection [1 month to >10 years]). The mean window period (average time individuals appear positive for a given algorithm) and performance in estimating an incidence estimate (in terms of bias and variance) of these MAAs were evaluated in three simulated epidemic scenarios (stable, emerging and waning). The power of different test methods to detect a 35% reduction in incidence in the matched communities of Project Accept was also assessed. A MAA was identified that included BED-CEIA, the avidity assay, CD4 cell count, and viral load that had a window period of 259 days, accurately estimated HIV incidence in all three epidemic settings and provided sufficient power to detect an intervention effect in Project Accept. Conclusions In a Southern African setting, HIV incidence estimates and intervention effects can be accurately estimated from cross-sectional surveys using a MAA. The improved accuracy in cross-sectional incidence testing that a MAA provides is a powerful tool for HIV surveillance and program evaluation.


International Journal of Std & Aids | 2013

Sexual risk and HIV prevention behaviours among African-American and Latino MSM social networking users.

Sean D. Young; Greg Szekeres; Thomas D. Coates

This study explores the feasibility of recruiting minority men who have sex with men Facebook users for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention studies and notes demographic and sexual risk behaviours. Facebook-registered men who have sex with men (MSM; N = 118) were recruited using online and offline methods. Participants validated Facebook-user status through using a Facebook Connect (computer science) application. Participants were primarily Latino (60.2%) and African-American (28.0%), with 33.1% using social media to find sex partners. Black MSM social networking users reported engaging in a lower frequency (coefficient = −0.48, p < 0.05) of unprotected receptive anal intercourse compared to Latino MSM. Results suggest that minority social media users can be recruited for HIV studies and that sexual risk behavioural differences exist among minority social networking users. Findings highlight the importance of incorporating technologies into population-focused HIV interventions.

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Agnès Fiamma

University of California

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Deborah Donnell

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Michael D. Sweat

Medical University of South Carolina

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Oliver Laeyendecker

National Institutes of Health

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Sean D. Young

University of California

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Sharif Sawires

University of California

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Michal Kulich

Charles University in Prague

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Linda Richter

University of the Witwatersrand

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