This proposed renewal of Dr. Wilson's K24 builds on the strong record of success achieved during the first 6 years of this award. Since the start of his K24 in 2003 he has mentored 52 individuals, including 19 whom he is currently mentoring. During this time his mentees have produced 26 first author published manuscripts and 19 first author abstracts. Eight mentees have gone on to be awarded K23's, and 3 to receive R-series awards. The research environment at Tufts Medical Center and Tufts University is highly conducive Dr. Wilson's patient-oriented research and provides several different sources for mentees, and as of 2008 includes a Clinical Translational Science Award (CTSA). Dr. Wilson is Co-PI of the Tufts CTSA and a Director of the Tufts Clinical and Translational Research Portal, which means that the scope of his mentoring is now University wide. The patient oriented research of Dr. Wilson and his mentees focuses on problems with medication adherence in persons with HIV. Despite the availability of one pill once daily treatment for HIV, poor adherence with HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) clearly continues to be a problem for HIV care providers worldwide. It is also clear that non-infectious comorbidity such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease is increasingly common in persons with HIV, and that medications required for these other conditions further complicate patients'adherence efforts. Progress on this important global problem requires that we be able to quickly and inexpensively identify patients with adherence problems, and that we have interventions to implement in response that target patients'individual needs. That is, we need to both better diagnosis and better treatment. The long term goal of this research is to link the accurate and timely diagnosis of medication adherence problems with customized treatments that are patient and medication specific. The overall research objective of this K24 is to complete a series of 5 significant and novel Aims, all of which focus on improving the quality of diagnosis and treatment of medication adherence problems in persons with HIV. The overall mentoring objective of this K24 is to develop researchers who not only have the skills to develop, implement, and publish hypothesis driven, patient-oriented research, but who understand the importance of bringing a multi-method, multi-disciplinary approach to clinical and translational research problems. In his mentoring Dr. Wilson emphasizes the importance of tailoring research methods to the nature of the problem of interest, even if that means learning new methods or developing collaborations with others from other disciplines familiar with those methods. The proposed research is relevant to the NIH's mission because it attempts to improve the quality of care for patients with a prevalent and serious, but highly treatable, chronic condition, and because the lessons learned from this HIV-related work are directly applicable to the care patients with other chronic conditions.

Public Health Relevance

Improving the health outcomes of persons with chronic conditions generally requires lifelong adherence with effective medications, which most patients find difficult. The patient-oriented research proposed in this K24 focuses broadly on improving both the diagnosis and treatment of medication adherence problems in persons with HIV. In addition, the mentoring plan that Dr. Wilson will implement will contribute to the training of the next generation of researchers to continue this important multidisciplinary work. While this K24 focuses on HIV, the lessons learned from this work are directly applicable to the care patients with other chronic conditions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (K24)
Project #
5K24MH092242-09
Application #
8499424
Study Section
Behavioral and Social Consequences of HIV/AIDS Study Section (BSCH)
Program Officer
Stirratt, Michael J
Project Start
2010-09-30
Project End
2015-04-30
Budget Start
2013-05-01
Budget End
2014-04-30
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$182,562
Indirect Cost
$12,665
Name
Brown University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
001785542
City
Providence
State
RI
Country
United States
Zip Code
02912
Wachira, Juddy; Genberg, Becky; Kafu, Catherine et al. (2018) The Perspective of HIV Providers in Western Kenya on Provider-Patient Relationships. J Health Commun 23:591-596
Callon, Wynne; Saha, Somnath; Wilson, Ira B et al. (2017) How does decision complexity affect shared decision making? An analysis of patient-provider antiretroviral initiation dialogue. Patient Educ Couns 100:919-926
Krakower, Douglas S; Ware, Norma C; Maloney, Kevin M et al. (2017) Differing Experiences with Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis in Boston Among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Specialists and Generalists in Primary Care: Implications for Scale-Up. AIDS Patient Care STDS 31:297-304
Wilson, Ira B; Lee, Yoojin; Michaud, Joanne et al. (2016) Validation of a New Three-Item Self-Report Measure for Medication Adherence. AIDS Behav 20:2700-2708
Tiruneh, Yordanos M; Wilson, Ira B (2016) What Time is it? Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy in Ethiopia. AIDS Behav 20:2662-2673
Tiruneh, Yordanos M; Galárraga, Omar; Genberg, Becky et al. (2016) Retention in Care among HIV-Infected Adults in Ethiopia, 2005- 2011: A Mixed-Methods Study. PLoS One 11:e0156619
Callon, Wynne; Saha, Somnath; Korthuis, P Todd et al. (2016) Which Clinician Questions Elicit Accurate Disclosure of Antiretroviral Non-adherence When Talking to Patients? AIDS Behav 20:1108-15
Matthews, Lynn T; Bajunirwe, Francis; Kastner, Jasmine et al. (2016) ""I Always Worry about What Might Happen Ahead"": Implementing Safer Conception Services in the Current Environment of Reproductive Counseling for HIV-Affected Men and Women in Uganda. Biomed Res Int 2016:4195762
Laws, M Barton; Danielewicz, Michael; Rana, Aadia et al. (2015) Health literacy in HIV treatment: accurate understanding of key biological treatment principles is not required for good ART adherence. AIDS Behav 19:635-44
Rana, Aadia I; Liu, Tao; Gillani, Fizza S et al. (2015) Multiple gaps in care common among newly diagnosed HIV patients. AIDS Care 27:679-87

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