Survey uncovers surprising attitudes toward HIV vaccine research
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[SEPT. 15, 2005]
BETHESDA, Md. -- A survey of U.S. adults
has found that a majority believe that HIV vaccines are the best
hope for controlling the global AIDS epidemic and are confident such
vaccines can be made. But while most of those surveyed felt it
personally important to help support HIV vaccine research, a
majority expressed reluctance to support a friend or family member's
participation in an HIV vaccine clinical trial.
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These were among the conflicting findings of a telephone survey of
more than 3,500 adults to assess attitudes, knowledge and awareness
of HIV vaccine research in the United States. The survey, conducted
by members of the HIV Vaccine Communications Campaign of the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases -- part
of the National Institutes of Health -- points to the ongoing
challenges HIV vaccine researchers face. A paper on the survey
results is available online now and will be published in an upcoming
print issue of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.
"Tens of thousands of volunteers are required for the more than 30
HIV vaccine clinical trials currently planned or under way," says NIAID director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.
"It is essential that current and future trials involve volunteers
from diverse communities to enable us to find a vaccine that works
for all populations."
"It is clear that we have a lot of work to do in explaining HIV
vaccine research," adds paper co-author Matthew Murguía, director of
the Office of Program Operations and Scientific Information in the
NIAID Division of AIDS. "We must develop strong partnerships with
communities highly impacted by HIV/AIDS so individuals from these
communities can make informed decisions about participating in HIV
vaccine research."
The survey, conducted between December 2002 and February 2003,
polled 2,008 U.S. adults aged 18 years of or older who were randomly selected
from the general population. An additional 1,501 U.S. adults
interviewed were randomly selected from each of three specific
subpopulations highly affected by HIV -- African-Americans, Hispanics
and men who have sex with men.
The survey uncovered some unexpected attitudes and beliefs:
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47 percent of African-Americans, 26 percent of Hispanics, 13
percent of men who have sex with men and 18 percent of the general
population believe that an HIV vaccine already exists but is being
kept a secret.
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Most subpopulation respondents -- 78 percent of African-Americans, 68
percent of men who have sex with men and 57 percent of
Hispanics -- either do not know whether or incorrectly believe that the
vaccines being tested can cause HIV infection. Only 24 percent of
the general population responded comparably.
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Among men who have sex with men, 77 percent cited HIV/AIDS as the
most urgent health problem. However, only a small percentage of the other
groups surveyed agreed: 11 percent of Hispanics, 15
percent of the general population and 22 percent of African-Americans.
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In general, women had less knowledge and awareness than men about
HIV vaccine research.
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High percentages of each group felt it was important to personally
support HIV vaccine research: 89 percent of both Hispanics and of
men who have sex with men, 86 percent of African-Americans and 73
percent of the general population. Nonetheless, many were reluctant
to express strong support for friends or family members volunteering
for HIV vaccine trials. Only 29 percent of the general population
and 35 percent of African-Americans said they would be extremely or
very supportive. Hispanics and men who have sex with men were more
inclined to be supportive: 46 percent and 68 percent, respectively.
The NIAID team also assessed trust in the U.S. government's ability
to protect HIV vaccine trial volunteers. While about half of three
groups -- 50 percent of men who have sex with men, 55 percent of African-Americans and
57 percent of the general population -- said they could
trust the government to protect HIV vaccine trial volunteers, the
rate of trust among Hispanics was significantly higher at 78
percent.
Based on interviews, focus groups and media analysis, NIAID team
members first developed five key messages on vaccine research. They
then designed the survey to determine whether these key messages
were the most important ones for the HIV Vaccine Communications
Campaign to address. These key messages were:
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There is currently no vaccine to prevent HIV infection.
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Only HIV-negative individuals can volunteer for a preventive HIV
vaccine trial.
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You cannot become infected with HIV from the vaccines being
tested.
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All populations must be involved in HIV vaccine research.
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An HIV preventive vaccine, complemented by strong behavioral
prevention programs and AIDS care and treatment, is the best way to
end the epidemic.
The
results of the survey, Murguía says, have helped identify
which populations researchers need to target for better
understanding of HIV vaccine research, as well as which messages
need to be tailored to specific populations. The NIAID team will
work to lower the barriers that inhibit potential volunteers from
diverse populations from participating in HIV vaccine trials and to
increase community support for those who volunteer for a trial.
[National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases] |