Irish College of General Practitioners, Lincoln Place, Dublin, Ireland.
School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 11;14(9):e0222186. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222186. eCollection 2019.
High levels of undiagnosed and untreated HCV infection exist in prison populations globally. Prisons are a key location to identify, treat and prevent HCV infection among people who inject drugs (PWID). Understanding prisoners' lived experiences of the HCV continuum of care informs how HCV care can be effectively delivered to this marginalised and high-risk population. This study aimed to explore Irish prisoners' experience of prison and community-based HCV care. We conducted one-to-one interviews with 25 male prisoners with chronic HCV infection. Data collection and analysis was informed by grounded theory. The mean age of participants and first incarceration was 39.5 and 18.3 years respectively. The mean number of incarcerations was eight. The following themes were identified: medical and social factors influencing engagement (fear of treatment and lack of knowledge, HCV relevance and competing priorities), adverse impact of HCV on health and wellness, positive experience of prison life and health care and the transformative clinical and non-clinical changes associated with HCV treatment and cure. Findings suggest that prison release was associated with multiple stressors including homelessness and drug dependence which quickly eroded the health benefits gained during incarceration. The study generated a substantive theory of the need to increase the importance of HCV care among the routine competing priorities associated with the lives of PWID. HCV infected prisoners often lead complex lives and understanding their journeys through the HCV continuum can inform the development of meaningful HCV care pathways. Many challenges exist to optimising HCV treatment uptake in this group and incarceration is an opportunity to successfully engage HCV infected prisoners who underutilise and are underserved by community-based medical services. Support and linkage to care on release is essential to optimising HCV management.
全球监狱人群中存在大量未经诊断和未治疗的丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染。监狱是在注射毒品者(PWID)中发现、治疗和预防 HCV 感染的关键场所。了解囚犯在 HCV 护理连续体中的生活经历,可以告知如何有效地为这一边缘化和高风险人群提供 HCV 护理。本研究旨在探讨爱尔兰囚犯在监狱和社区 HCV 护理方面的经历。我们对 25 名患有慢性 HCV 感染的男性囚犯进行了一对一的访谈。数据收集和分析受到扎根理论的启发。参与者的平均年龄和首次入狱年龄分别为 39.5 岁和 18.3 岁。平均入狱次数为 8 次。确定了以下主题:影响参与的医疗和社会因素(对治疗的恐惧和缺乏知识、HCV 的相关性和竞争优先级)、HCV 对健康和健康的不利影响、监狱生活和医疗保健的积极体验以及与 HCV 治疗和治愈相关的变革性临床和非临床变化。研究结果表明,出狱后与许多压力源有关,包括无家可归和药物依赖,这些压力源很快削弱了在监禁期间获得的健康益处。该研究产生了一个实质性的理论,即需要在与 PWID 生活相关的常规竞争优先级中增加 HCV 护理的重要性。感染 HCV 的囚犯通常过着复杂的生活,了解他们在 HCV 连续体中的旅程可以为制定有意义的 HCV 护理途径提供信息。在这一人群中优化 HCV 治疗的采用存在许多挑战,监禁是一个机会,可以成功接触到那些未充分利用和服务不足的社区医疗服务的感染 HCV 的囚犯。释放后的支持和护理联系对于优化 HCV 管理至关重要。