Abstract 2230: Connecting Black men to point of prostate cancer diagnosis (PPCD) support using precision intervention based on Virtual Reality Assistant (ViRA)
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Date
2024-03-15
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Volume 84, Issue 6_Supplement POSTER PRESENTATIONS - PROFFERED ABSTRACTS
Abstract
Background: The point of prostate cancer (CaP) diagnosis (PPCD) instantly leads to a
life changing experience for Black men, with diverse emotional reactions that includes
fear, denial, overwhelmingness, cancer fatalism etc. Black men diagnosed with CaP
expressed several needs at the PPCD, including time to reflect on the diagnosis, being
comfortable, emotional support, psycho-oncology support and social determinants of
health (SDOH) navigation. Given that Black men are diverse in terms of their needs at
the PPCD, precision intervention is needed to support them.
Aim: The aim was to develop, implement, and establish the acceptance and usability of
a Virtual Reality Assistant (ViRA) that will provide precision intervention tailored to the
needs of Black men at the PPCD. This study is one of the five iCCaRE for Black Men
projects focused on survivorship care.
Methodology: The development of the ViRA was guided by CaP survivors through
qualitative study. Reflective, analytic, and interpretive memos were used to generate
action plans for the development of the ViRA. Based on a comprehensive PPCD ViRA
intervention guide created by the team, the ViRA prototype was developed with mobile
immersive technologies that integrated SDOH navigation, standard CaP psycho
oncology support and emotional support. The goal was to have the intervention
personalized to everyone based on participant-provided information. Alpha testing of the
ViRA is ongoing and will be completed on November 20, 2023. Participants are three
prostate cancer survivors and three clinicians. The assessments will confirm the
accuracy of the ViRA predictions and the functionality of the ViRA.
Results: We developed the ViRA SDOH screening and navigation tool to identify
participants’ needs and appropriately connect them with relevant support services and
resources in their communities. The emotional support intervention was based on four
CaP survivors as virtual reality avatars, providing empathetic rapport through self
disclosure and sharing of survivorship stories in different settings (home, clinic,
barbershop etc). The psycho-oncology support intervention was developed with the
guidance of a psycho-oncologist, with her avatar providing psychoeducation about the
PPCD experience, reify and concretize the PPCD experience, and foster hope using the
basic tenets of Problem-Solving Therapy. The results of the alpha testing and the
modified ViRA will be presented during the conference.
Conclusion: Meeting the needs of Black men at the PPCD requires a personalized and
decentralized approach, which would allow Black men to access support anywhere. The
presentation will unveil the iCCaRE ViRA, a smart and connected personalized AR
enabled intervention that will deliver SDOH navigation, CaP psycho-oncology support
and emotional support tailored to the needs of Black men.