DOAJ Open Access 2024

Kentucky Outreach Service Kiosk (KyOSK) Study protocol: a community-level, controlled quasi-experimental, type 1 hybrid effectiveness study to assess implementation, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a community-tailored harm reduction kiosk on HIV, HCV and overdose risk in rural Appalachia

Peter Vickerman Melvin D Livingston April M Young Jennifer R Havens Kathryn E McCollister +13 lainnya

Abstrak

Introduction Many rural communities bear a disproportionate share of drug-related harms. Innovative harm reduction service models, such as vending machines or kiosks, can expand access to services that reduce drug-related harms. However, few kiosks operate in the USA, and their implementation, impact and cost-effectiveness have not been adequately evaluated in rural settings. This paper describes the Kentucky Outreach Service Kiosk (KyOSK) Study protocol to test the effectiveness, implementation outcomes and cost-effectiveness of a community-tailored, harm reduction kiosk in reducing HIV, hepatitis C and overdose risk in rural Appalachia.Methods and analysis KyOSK is a community-level, controlled quasi-experimental, non-randomised trial. KyOSK involves two cohorts of people who use drugs, one in an intervention county (n=425) and one in a control county (n=325). People who are 18 years or older, are community-dwelling residents in the target counties and have used drugs to get high in the past 6 months are eligible. The trial compares the effectiveness of a fixed-site, staffed syringe service programme (standard of care) with the standard of care supplemented with a kiosk. The kiosk will contain various harm reduction supplies accessible to participants upon valid code entry, allowing dispensing data to be linked to participant survey data. The kiosk will include a call-back feature that allows participants to select needed services and receive linkage-to-care services from a peer recovery coach. The cohorts complete follow-up surveys every 6 months for 36 months (three preceding kiosk implementation and four post-implementation). The study will test the effectiveness of the kiosk on reducing risk behaviours associated with overdose, HIV and hepatitis C, as well as implementation outcomes and cost-effectiveness.Ethics and dissemination The University of Kentucky Institutional Review Board approved the protocol. Results will be disseminated in academic conferences and peer-reviewed journals, online and print media, and community meetings.Trial registration number NCT05657106.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (18)

P

Peter Vickerman

M

Melvin D Livingston

A

April M Young

J

Jennifer R Havens

K

Kathryn E McCollister

E

Edward Freeman

A

Amanda Fallin-Bennett

L

Laura Fanucchi

H

Hannah L F Cooper

P

Patricia R Freeman

H

Hannah Knudsen

J

Jack Stone

T

Tasfia Jahangir

E

Elizabeth Larimore

C

Carol R White

C

Chelsi Cheatom

K

KyOSK Community Staff

K

KyOSK Design Team

Format Sitasi

Vickerman, P., Livingston, M.D., Young, A.M., Havens, J.R., McCollister, K.E., Freeman, E. et al. (2024). Kentucky Outreach Service Kiosk (KyOSK) Study protocol: a community-level, controlled quasi-experimental, type 1 hybrid effectiveness study to assess implementation, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a community-tailored harm reduction kiosk on HIV, HCV and overdose risk in rural Appalachia. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-083983

Akses Cepat

PDF tidak tersedia langsung

Cek di sumber asli →
Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-083983
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2024
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.1136/bmjopen-2024-083983
Akses
Open Access ✓