| Literature DB >> 32615951 |
William C W Wong1,2, Nancy S Yang3, Jingjing Li4,5, Hang Li1, Eric Y F Wan2,6, Thomas Fitzpatrick7, Yuan Xiong8,9, Wai-Kay Seto10,11,12, Polin Chan13, Ruihong Liu1, Weiming Tang8,14, Joseph D Tucker8,9,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a growing public health problem with a large disease burden worldwide. In China many people living with HCV are unaware of their hepatitis status and not connected to care and treatment. Crowdsourcing is a technique that invites the public to create health promotion materials and has been found to increase HIV testing uptake, including in China. This trial aims to evaluate crowdsourcing as a strategy to improve HCV awareness, testing and linkage-to-care in China.Entities:
Keywords: China; Crowdsourcing; Hepatitis C virus (HCV); Linkage-to-care; Primary care; Testing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32615951 PMCID: PMC7330974 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09152-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Crowdsourcing: the “bottom-up” approach to solicit ideas on HCV testing and linkage to care
Primary and secondary outcomes with definitions
| Confirmed HCV testing uptake | Participants that complete HCV testing as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH or other public facility in Shenzhen within 4 weeks of enrollment |
| Self-reported HCV testing uptake | Participants that complete HCV testing within 4 weeks of enrollment, self-reported in follow-up survey |
| Followed-up for HCV confirmatory testing | Participants that follow-up with a provider at HKU-SZH for HCV RNA diagnostic testing, as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH or other public facility in Shenzhen |
| Self-reported follow-up for HCV confirmatory testing | Participants that follow-up with a provider at HKU-SZH or other care facilities in China for HCV RNA confirmatory testing, self-reported in follow-up survey |
| Initiated anti-HCV treatment | Participants that have a confirmed HCV diagnosis and initiate anti-HCV treatment at HKU-SZH Department of Gastroenterology, confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH or other public facility in Shenzhen |
| Completed anti-HCV treatment | Participants that complete the full anti-HCV regiment, as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH |
| Diagnosed with chronic liver disease | Participants that are diagnosed with chronic liver disease including cirrhosis, advanced cirrhosis, or hepatocellular carcinoma at any point during the study, as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH |
| Followed-up with Liver Clinic for advanced chronic liver disease | Participants that are diagnosed with advanced chronic liver disease (i.e. advanced cirrhosis) and receive follow-up care at the Liver Clinic at HKU-SZH, as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH |
| Cured of HCV infection | Participants that achieve sustained virological response (SVR), defined as absence of detectable hepatitis C virus 12 weeks after completion of treatment, confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH |
| Returned to primary care for future screening | Participants that returned to FMPC for services including regular HBV/HCV screening, HBV screening, HIV screening, other STI screening, as confirmed by medical records at HKU-SZH |