| Literature DB >> 30744628 |
Ellen Childs1, Sabrina A Assoumou2, Katie B Biello3,4,5, Dea L Biancarelli1,6, Mari-Lynn Drainoni1,2,6,7, Alberto Edeza3,4, Peter Salhaney3, Matthew J Mimiaga3,4,5,8, Angela R Bazzi9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is increasingly prevalent among people who inject drugs (PWID) in the context of the current US opioid crisis. Although curative therapy is available and recommended as a public health strategy, few PWID have been treated. We explore PWID narratives that explain why they have not sought HCV treatment or decided against starting it. We then compare these narratives to evidence-based and guideline-concordant information to better enable health, social service, harm reduction providers, PWID, and other stakeholders to dispel misconceptions and improve HCV treatment uptake in this vulnerable population.Entities:
Keywords: HCV infections; Intravenous; Risk factors; Substance abuse
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30744628 PMCID: PMC6371610 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-019-0286-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Characteristics of people who inject drugs (n = 33) and report having been diagnosed with HCV (n = 26)*
| Overall | Sample with HCV | |
|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographics | ||
| City | ||
| Boston | 16 (48%) | 15 (58%) |
| Providence | 17 (52%) | 11 (42%) |
| Age in years; median (interquartile range) | 36 (32–48) | 36 (30–44) |
| Race (categories are not mutually exclusive) | ||
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 3 (9%) | 2 (8%) |
| Black or African American | 7 (21%) | 4 (15%) |
| White | 22 (67%) | 21 (81%) |
| Other | 5 (15%) | 3 (12%) |
| Ethnicity: Hispanic/Latino | 8 (24%) | 6 (23%) |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 18 (55%) | 14 (54%) |
| Female | 13 (39%) | 12 (46%) |
| Transwoman | 1 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Genderqueer | 1 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Sexual orientation | ||
| Heterosexual or “Straight” | 21 (64%) | 16 (62%) |
| Bisexual | 8 (24%) | 7 (27%) |
| Homosexual or Gay | 4 (12%) | 3 (12%) |
| Sexual health and substance use behaviors | ||
| Diagnosed with HCV, ever | 26 (79%) | 26 (100%) |
| Any distributive or receptive syringe sharing, past month | 21 (64%) | 18 (69%) |
| Number of people with whom participant shared injection paraphernalia (cookers, cottons, rinse water), past month | ||
| 0 | 12 (36%) | 8 (31%) |
| 1–2 | 10 (30%) | 9 (35%) |
| ≥ 3 | 11 (33%) | 9 (35%) |
*May exceed 100% when categories were not mutually exclusive
Evidence-based responses to representative examples of common narratives by PWID in the US on reasons to delay HCV treatment
| Narratives of PWID | Evidence | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| • Curing all HCV-infected PWID of HCV benefits individual and overall public health. | [ |
|
| • New direct-acting antiviral treatments are well-tolerated with limited side effects, even among individuals who are difficult to treat | [ |
|
| • PWID are adherent to HCV treatment and have low rates of reinfection | [ |
|
| • HCV treatment availability in correctional settings varies, but research shows that it is feasible (though maintaining engagement in care post-release is a concern) and a growing number of facilities are providing therapy to incarcerated individuals {Beckman, 2016 #3713} | [ |
|
| • Testing and treating PWID for HCV is cost-effective | [ |