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RECRUITING
NCT06266416
NA

IMARA for Black Male Caregivers and Girls Empowerment (IMAGE)

Sponsor: University of Illinois at Chicago

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The scientific premise of this research is that individual, interpersonal, and structural factors impact Black girls' sexual reproductive health outcomes (sexually transmitted infection (STI) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)) and experience of sexual violence. This study expands STI/HIV prevention programs to include Black male caregivers, a potentially valuable yet underutilized resource to protect Black girls and reduce their exposure to STI/HIV and sexual violence.

Official title: A Family-Based HIV Prevention Program for Black Men to Protect Black Girls

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

14 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

612

Start Date

2024-10-05

Completion Date

2028-05-31

Last Updated

2025-05-08

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

IMARA for Black Male Caregivers and Girls Empowerment

IMAGE is delivered by trained Black female facilitators to improve girls' SRH outcomes, prevention HIV/STIs, and reduce sexual violence. Over the two days, some components of the curriculum are delivered separately to male caregivers and girls, covering parallel content, and other sections are delivered jointly in a single group. The curriculum, extensively tailored for the target population and pilot tested, addresses Black girls' sexual development, risk for sexual violence, female anatomy, body positivity, HIV/STI knowledge and attitudes, and condom use. IMAGE is designed to strengthen bonds and communication between male caregivers and girls by encouraging perspective-taking (i.e., reverse role play) and conflict resolution.

BEHAVIORAL

Time-matched control program

FUEL will engage Black male caregivers and girls to promote good nutrition, exercise, and informed consumer behavior. Topics include the impact of media on body image, evaluating nutritional labels to make healthy food choices, eating balanced meals, establishing regular exercise routines, and how families and communities can support healthy behavior. FUEL includes a brief video about HIV/AIDS and other STIs but otherwise does not otherwise address sexual health. Like IMAGE, FUEL is delivered in groups of 6-8 dyads over two workshop days (\~10 hours total) in one weekend. Parts of the curriculum are delivered separately to girls and male caregivers covering parallel content and other components are delivered jointly.

Locations (1)

University of Illinois Chicago

Chicago, Illinois, United States