3 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
Latex condoms have long been available as contraceptive devices as well as an effective means of preventing the spread of sexually transmitted infections. However, lack of adequate lubrication leads to inconsistent and incorrect condom use. The latex HydroGlyde condom has a hydrophilic coating which maintains its lubricity when in contact with water. Improved lubrication during intercourse may lead to improved user satisfaction and increased condom use which would help prevent the spread of Sexually Transmitted Infections and unwanted pregnancies. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the preference, performance (breakage, slippage), safety (adverse events) and acceptability of a HydroGlyde prototype condom compared to a commercial latex condom with silicone lubricant. A secondary objective of this study is to compare and evaluate various lubricant activation methods for reliability, usability, and user preference.
To conduct a randomized clinical trial (RCT) of a community-friendly behavioral intervention designed to reduce HIV risk behavior among injection drug users (IDUs) in drug treatment by comparing risk-behavior outcomes of four weekly intervention sessions with a time-and-attention-matched control condition.
One of the objectives of the C2P coalition is the successful delivery of a CDC-endorsed community-level HIV prevention program aimed at changing the risk profiles of youth. This protocol (ATN 041) describes the program, Community PROMISE (Peers Reaching Out and Modeling Intervention Strategies) or MPowerment, and plans for adapting and implementing it. There are a total of 4 interventions that a community can implement.