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Nurse-led viral hepatitis prevention alongside shared care drug clinics a before and after study Pat O’Dea - Research Assistant Manchester Urban Collaboration on Health University of Manchester Deborah Carr - Shared Care Support Team, Manchester Drug Service 11th International Hepatitis C Conference 16th November 2009 Overview • • • • Background Methodology Results Conclusion Background • Partnership working – Specialist drug service – Primary care teams – University • Simple study to demonstrate effectiveness of integrated practice to partners and commissioners • Retrospective review of shared care clinics showed wide variation in uptake of viral hepatitis prevention measures Background • RCGP guidance recommends – Hepatitis A & B vaccination & BBV testing of IDUs on an opportunistic basis – GPs should offer blood tests for HAV,HBV & HVC – Pragmatism suggests vaccination on an opportunistic basis Methodology • Before & after study • Formative evaluation • Aim to increase BBV prevention measures – 6 LES practices – June - Sept 2007 =100 service users – June - Sept 2008 =106 service users Methodology • Interventions delivered by specialist support nurse – Initial audit – Action plan in consultation with PHCT – BBV vaccination & testing concurrent with drug treatment – Second audit • Outcome measure – Vaccination and testing uptake Results Increase in uptake of viral hepatitis prevention measures 100 90 80 70 60 % 50 40 30 20 10 0 2007 Any BBV test 3rd Hep B 2nd Hep B 1st Hep B 2nd Hep A 1st Hep A 2008* * p<0.01 Conclusion • IDUs uptake of viral hepatitis prevention measures in line with RCGP guidance can be improved using this model of practice • Effective – Increased uptake of viral hepatitis prevention measures when delivered alongside LES drug treatment clinic • Efficient – Uses existing resources • Demonstrated benefits of partnership working