Sexual Confidence: CBT for Social Anxiety Disorder With HIV Risk Reduction Counselling for HIV-negative gbMSM (SC-RCT)
Social Anxiety, Sexual Risk, HIV

About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Social Anxiety focused on measuring MSM, social anxiety, HIV, sexual risk
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Participants must report engaging in CAS sex without PrEP with a man of HIV-positive or unknown HIV status within the last 3 months and report using substances within 2 hours before and/or during sexual activities. Participants must self-identify as a man (including trans* men who self-identify as men), and be aged 18 or older.
To minimize bias, participants will be asked to report to the research study clinician in case they decide to engage in other psychotherapies outside of the study protocol or decide to change their psychoactive medication or dose for the duration of their participation in the study. Participants who participate in outside psychotherapies or who change their medication regimens will still be permitted to conclude the therapy, but their data will not be included in the RCT analyses.
Exclusion Criteria:
- As mentioned previously, participants taking PrEP will be excluded from participating. This excludes individuals 1) on daily PrEP dosing, with no more then 3 doses missed per week at the time of exposure and 2) on-demand dosing at the time of the exposure, including at least one dose before and after exposure. Participants need to score within 1 SD of the clinical mean (M = 67.2) for social anxiety disorder on the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale.
- Persons will be excluded if our assessors/counsellors find that a participant's ability to respond to study measures is compromised by mental or physical disabilities or inability to speak and understand English.
Sites / Locations
- Ryerson UniversityRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Applied Relaxation
In sessions 1-2, the participant's sexual history and goals regarding social anxiety reduction and HIV risk reduction will be discussed, including reducing CAS, and considering use of PrEP to reduce HIV risk. In sessions 3-4, the role of social anxiety and substances in social avoidance and HIV risk will be discussed, and a fear hierarchy of the participant's social fears will be created. In sessions 5-7, cognitive restructuring and coping skills for anxiety reduction will be discussed. In sessions 8-9, participants will face their fears via exposures to feared situations using their new cognitive coping skills. In sessions 10-11, exposures are continued with a focus on (a) situations higher in the fear hierarchy and (b) the role of substance use as a barrier to personal goals. In session 12, relapse prevention and goals for progress regarding social anxiety, substance use, and HIV risk reduction beyond the end of therapy will be discussed.
In AR, patients are trained in progressive muscle relaxation, and then taught to practice using relaxation when facing feared situations, as a new coping response. AR involves noticing early signs of anxiety, learning relaxation skills, and applying relaxation at the first sign of anxiety. This therapy is chosen because it does not involve the cognitive and exposure focused techniques that are used in the experimental condition. Reviews of psychological treatments show that AR does not statistically differ from cognitive restructuring with exposure in its effects on social anxiety. However, AR is an appropriate control arm for the present study because it is credible and can be time-matched to CBT, but has no theoretical or empirical support for substance use management or HIV risk behaviour reduction, the latter of which is the primary outcome of the present study.