| Literature DB >> 30157316 |
Emma Day1, Margaret Hellard2, Carla Treloar3, Julie Bruneau4, Natasha K Martin5, Anne Øvrehus6, Olav Dalgard7, Andrew Lloyd8, John Dillon9, Matt Hickman10, Jude Byrne11, Alain Litwin12, Mojca Maticic13,14, Philip Bruggmann15, Havard Midgard16, Brianna Norton12, Stacey Trooskin17, Jeffrey V Lazarus18, Jason Grebely8.
Abstract
The burden of hepatitis C infection is considerable among people who inject drugs (PWID), with an estimated prevalence of 39%, representing an estimated 6.1 million people who have recently injected drugs living with hepatitis C infection. As such, PWID are a priority population for enhancing prevention, testing, linkage to care, treatment and follow-up care in order to meet World Health Organization (WHO) hepatitis C elimination goals by 2030. There are many barriers to enhancing hepatitis C prevention and care among PWID including poor global coverage of harm reduction services, restrictive drug policies and criminalization of drug use, poor access to health services, low hepatitis C testing, linkage to care and treatment, restrictions for accessing DAA therapy, and the lack of national strategies and government investment to support WHO elimination goals. On 5 September 2017, the International Network of Hepatitis in Substance Users (INHSU) held a roundtable panel of international experts to discuss remaining challenges and future priorities for action from a health systems perspective. The WHO health systems framework comprises six core components: service delivery, health workforce, health information systems, medical procurement, health systems financing, and leadership and governance. Communication has been proposed as a seventh key element which promotes the central role of affected community engagement. This review paper presents recommended strategies for eliminating hepatitis C as a major public health threat among PWID and outlines future priorities for action within a health systems framework.Entities:
Keywords: elimination; health systems; people who inject drugs; viral hepatitis C
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157316 PMCID: PMC6868526 DOI: 10.1111/liv.13949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Liver Int ISSN: 1478-3223 Impact factor: 5.828