| Literature DB >> 33372245 |
Moaz Abdelwadoud1, T Joseph Mattingly2, Hemanuel Arroyo Seguí3, Emily F Gorman4, Eleanor M Perfetto2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33372245 PMCID: PMC8357769 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00489-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Description of patient-centeredness dimensions and recognition elements
| Patient-centeredness dimension | Description of dimension component(s) [ |
|---|---|
| Access to care | Geographical accessibility to services Waiting times and ease of scheduling appointments Linkage to specialty services on referral |
| Coordination and integration of care | Coordinated care: focuses on communication between different services Co-located care: focuses on physical proximity Integrated care: emphasizes practice change |
| Continuity and translation | Understandable medical, social, physical, and financial support information Follow-up and adherence support for required clinical visits Coordinated HCV treatment plan with other services Continuity after completing HCV treatment |
| Physical comfort | Assistance with daily activities and living needs Pain management |
| Information, education, and communication | Information on clinical status, disease progress and prognosis, and processes of care Information to facilitate autonomy, self-care, and health promotion |
| Emotional support | Reassurance and alleviating anxiety over clinical status; treatment; prognosis; impact of the illness on patients and their family, and the financial impact of their illness |
| Involvement of family and friends | Addressing the patient family and friends’ needs in terms of: Accommodation to treatment including education and adherence Protection including HCV screening Supporting caregiving Involvement in treatment evaluation |
| Respect for individual patient preferences, perceived needs, and values | Respect for the patient cultural values and autonomy Focusing on the individual patient needs via personalized education, adherence, and treatment plan Shared decision making |
DAA direct-acting antiviral, HCV hepatitis C virus
Fig. 1PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram of the search and study selection process. DAA direct-acting antiviral, HCV hepatitis C virus, PWID people who inject drugs
Summary of included studies’ characteristics
| Characteristic | Number of studies ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Year of publication | 2019 | 23 |
| 2018 | 5 | |
| 2017 | 7 | |
| 2015 | 1 | |
| Country | USA | 16 |
| Australia and New Zealand | 8 | |
| UK | 5 | |
| Canada | 2 | |
| Georgia | 2 | |
| France | 1 | |
| India | 1 | |
| Italy | 1 | |
| Study setting | Primary care center | 7 |
| Substance abuse management center | 6 | |
| HIV clinic | 3 | |
| Homeless care center | 3 | |
| Harm reduction and syringe exchange program | 2 | |
| Correctional facility | 2 | |
| University hospital | 2 | |
| Veterans Affairs hospital | 2 | |
| Department of Public Health | 1 | |
| Local pharmacy | 1 | |
| Specialized HCV or infectious disease clinic | 1 | |
| Harm reduction program + specialized HCV or infectious disease clinic | 3 | |
| Substance abuse management center + primary care center | 1 | |
| Substance abuse management center + university hospital | 1 | |
| Primary care center + university hospital | 1 | |
| Homeless care center + university hospital | 1 | |
| Study design | Observational | |
| Cohort | 23 | |
| Case–control | 1 | |
| Cross-sectional | 2 | |
| Experimental | ||
| Randomized controlled trials | 8 | |
| Non-randomized controlled trials | 2 | |
| Study aim(s)a | Assessing HCV and liver disease burden among target population | 2 |
| Identifying social experiences and motivations of PWID for HCV treatment | 1 | |
| Assessing the safety and efficacy of DAA treatment in PWID | 2 | |
| Assessing the impact of drug use and substance abuse management on HCV treatment outcomes | 1 | |
| Describing treatment intervention model | 4 | |
| Assessing the feasibility of treatment intervention model | 7 | |
| Assessing the effectiveness of treatment intervention in engaging patients with testing, linkage to care, treatment adherence, treatment completion, SVR, and reinfection prevention | 24 | |
| Assessing the factors influencing linkage to HCV care, treatment adherence, treatment completion, and SVR | 7 | |
| Assessing patient satisfaction with the treatment intervention model | 1 | |
| Study primary outcome | Quantification of HCV treatment continuum rates: screening, linkage to care, treatment adherence, treatment completion, SVR, and reinfection | 33 |
| Efficacy of peer engagement | 1 | |
| Characteristics of patients who did not achieve SVR | 1 | |
| Social incentives of PWID on HCV treatment | 1 | |
| Participants characteristics in relevance to drug use | Described | 29 |
| Not described | 7 | |
DAA direct-acting antiviral, HCV hepatitis C virus, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, PWID people who inject drugs, SVR sustained virologic response
aSome studies had more than one aim
Distribution of patient centeredness dimensions and recognition elements in the analyzed studies
| Patient-centeredness dimension | Dimension component(s) | Number of studies that addressed each component | Total number of studies that addressed the dimension ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Access | Geographical accessibility [ | 10 | 14a |
| Waiting times and scheduling appointments [ | 5 | ||
| Linkage to specialty services [ | 3 | ||
| Coordination and integration | Coordinated care [ | 7 | 35a |
| Co-located care [ | 11 | ||
| Integrated care [ | 17 | ||
| Continuity and translation | Understandable information [ | 4 | 23a |
| Follow-up and adherence support [ | 19 | ||
| Coordinated HCV treatment plan with other services [ | 7 | ||
| Continuity after completing HCV treatment [ | 6 | ||
| Physical comfort | Assistance with daily activities [ | 14 | 14 |
| Pain management | 0 | ||
| Information & education | Information on clinical status, disease progress and prognosis, and processes of care [ | 25 | 25 |
| Information to facilitate autonomy, self-care, and health promotion | 0 | ||
| Emotional support | Reassurance and alleviating anxiety [ | 20 | 20 |
| Involvement of family and friends | Accommodation to treatment [ | 2 | 5a |
| Protection including HCV screening [ | 2 | ||
| Supporting caregiving | 0 | ||
Involvement in treatment evaluation [ Unspecified “buddy” involvement [ | 1 1 | ||
| Respect for individual patient preferences, perceived needs, and values | Respect for the patient cultural values and autonomy | 0 | 9 |
| Focusing on the individual patient needs [ | 8 | ||
| Shared decision making [ | 1 |
HCV hepatitis C virus
aStudies that addressed more than one component of the dimension were counted once in the total dimension count
| This scoping review identified and assessed the inclusion of different dimensions of patient-centered care (PCC) in hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment delivery to people who inject drugs (PWID) during the direct-acting antiviral era. It also assessed how the included studies recognized patient centeredness and reported on its relevance to treatment outcomes. |
| The analyzed studies incorporated the dimensions of PCC using different approaches and strategies, however; none of them could include all eight dimensions. |
| The recognition of PCC importance and its relevance to treatment outcomes emphasizes the need for more patient-centered PWID HCV treatment delivery. |
| Future HCV treatment delivery studies should detail how treatment services are provided and assess PWID HCV treatment experiences and reported outcomes for better understanding of direct-acting antiviral clinical outcomes and their real-world attributions. |