London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
School of Population Health and Environmental Sciences, Guy's campus, King's College London, Addison House, London, UK.
BMC Infect Dis. 2018 Jun 19;18(1):281. doi: 10.1186/s12879-018-3185-7.
Hepatitis C (HCV) diagnosis and care is a major challenge for people who use illicit drugs, and is characterised by low rates of testing and treatment engagement globally. New approaches to fostering engagement are needed. We explored the acceptability of remote forms of HCV testing including self-testing and self-sampling among people who use drugs in London, UK.
A qualitative rapid assessment was undertaken with people who use drugs and stakeholders in London, UK. Focus groups were held with men who have sex with men engaged in drug use, people who currently inject drugs and people who formerly injected drugs (22 participants across the 3 focus groups). Stakeholders participated in semi-structured interviews (n = 5). We used a thematic analysis to report significant themes in participants' responses.
We report an overarching theme of 'tension' in how participants responded to the acceptability of remote testing. This tension is evident across four separate sub-themes we explore. First, choice and control, with some valuing the autonomy and privacy remote testing could support. Second, the ease of use of self testing linked to its immediate result and saliva sample was preferred over the delayed result from a self administered blood sample tested in a laboratory. Third, many respondents described the need to embed remote testing within a supportive care pathway. Fourth, were concerns over managing a positive result, and its different meanings, in isolation.
The concept of remote HCV testing is acceptable to some people who use drugs in London, although tensions with lived experience of drug use and health system access limit its relevance. Future development of remote testing must respond to concerns raised in order for acceptable implementation to take place.
丙型肝炎(HCV)的诊断和治疗是滥用非法药物者面临的一大挑战,其特点是全球范围内检测和治疗参与率低。需要采取新方法来促进参与。我们探索了在英国伦敦的吸毒者中远程 HCV 检测(包括自我检测和自我采样)的可接受性。
对英国伦敦的吸毒者和利益攸关方进行了快速定性评估。与男男性行为者、目前注射毒品者和以前注射毒品者(3 个焦点小组共 22 名参与者)举行了焦点小组会议。利益攸关方参加了半结构式访谈(n=5)。我们使用主题分析来报告参与者回应中显著的主题。
我们报告了一个总体主题,即参与者对远程检测可接受性的反应存在“紧张”。这种紧张在我们探索的四个独立子主题中都很明显。首先,是选择和控制,一些人重视远程检测可以提供的自主权和隐私。其次,自我检测的易用性与即时结果和唾液样本相关,这比实验室检测的自我管理血液样本的延迟结果更受欢迎。第三,许多受访者描述了将远程检测嵌入支持性护理途径的必要性。第四,是对孤立管理阳性结果及其不同含义的担忧。
在英国伦敦的一些吸毒者中,远程 HCV 检测的概念是可以接受的,尽管与吸毒和卫生系统获得的实际情况存在紧张关系,限制了其相关性。为了能够进行可接受的实施,未来必须针对提出的关切来开发远程检测。