| Literature DB >> 32921306 |
Luke Johnson1,2, Dan Lewer3, Robert W Aldridge4, Andrew C Hayward1, Alistair Story1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Homelessness is a global issue and HIV, hepatitis C and tuberculosis are known to be prevalent in this group. Homeless populations face significant barriers to care. We aim to summarise evidence of treatment initiation and completion for homeless populations with these infections, and their associated factors, through a systematic review and meta-analysis.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Hepatitis C; Homelessness; Inclusion health; Inequality; LTBI; Treatment adherence; Treatment completion; Treatment initiation; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32921306 PMCID: PMC7488663 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01470-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Data to be extracted from studies included within the review
| HIV | Hepatitis C | Active tuberculosis | LTBI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author, year of publication, title of study | ||||
| Study design, study funding, country study carried out in, inclusion/exclusion criteria for participants, recruitment method, sample size, any remuneration for participants, location of screening/treatment (e.g. hostel, hospital, mobile screening unit), description of intervention, who is delivering intervention, study start-end date, assessment points, description of any comparison/control (including definition, selection source, any confounding factors identified and/or controlled for) | ||||
| Sex/gender, age, ethnicity, history of imprisonment, comorbidities, reported to be taking injection drugs, non-injection drugs reported to be taking, primary condition(s), history of previously treated hepatitis C or TB | ||||
| Number/percentage who initiated treatment from those referred, reasons for not initiating treatment (if known), type of treatment given | ||||
| Undetectable viral load | Number/percentage who completed treatment, method by which treatment adherence/completion measured, programme adherence techniques (e.g. DOTS, case manager, phone calls, housing of patients during treatment), number/percentage lost to follow-up and reasons why if stated (including number found to have died and, if specified, reasons for death) | |||