1 / 27

Screening the Chinese Community for Hepatitis B

Screening the Chinese Community for Hepatitis B. Hazel Younger Consultant Gastroenterologist Raigmore Hospital, Inverness. The Problem. 90% chronic Hepatitis B infection with vertical transmission Chronic Hepatitis B causes cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma

gili
Download Presentation

Screening the Chinese Community for Hepatitis B

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Screening the Chinese Community for Hepatitis B Hazel Younger Consultant Gastroenterologist Raigmore Hospital, Inverness

  2. The Problem • 90% chronic Hepatitis B infection with vertical transmission • Chronic Hepatitis B causes cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma • In SE Asia and China in particular, approximately 10% of population has chronic Hepatitis B • Immigration to areas of low endemicity can lead to personal and public health difficulties

  3. The Problem • Knowledge of Hepatitis B is poor in SE Asian immigrant populations • Stigma attached to having Hepatitis B • Less than half of those eligible will request screening • Different health beliefs and cultures

  4. 2001 Census • Scottish population 5,062,011 • Ethnic Chinese 16,310 • Glasgow 5000 (7500) • Lothian 4000 • Grampian 1600

  5. Chinese Population

  6. Chinese Hepatitis B Education Project • March 2002 – February 2004 • Lothian population • Establish education programme • Dedicated Chinese clinic • Identify and treat individuals with chronic Hepatitis B and evidence of active replication

  7. Outline • Run by Centre for Liver and Digestive Disorders at RIE in liaison with the Lothian Health Protection Team and Minority Ethnic Health Inclusion Project (MEHIP) • Used the ‘Social Diffusion’ model – targeting easy-to-reach members of the Community and through them communicate with members who are harder to reach

  8. Project • Communication by letter to all local GPs • List of possible Chinese community groups contacted via MEHIP • Search for suitable educational material already available • Leaflet design and translation • Evaluation questionnaires • Education video sourced (Cantonese) • Clinic space found

  9. Meetings • Church groups, schools, elderly and womens’ groups, lunch club, health fair • Video in Cantonese • Talk from CLDD doctor (with interpreter) • Question and answer session • Issued with bilingual information leaflet, letter for GP and identifiable virology request form • Encouraged to attend GP for testing

  10. Topics Covered • Chinese endemicity • Carrier state • Modes of transmission • Preventing transmission • Explanation of project and hospital clinic

  11. Meetings • 14 education sessions, 13 in Cantonese • Evaluated by questionnaire – age, gender, assessment of usefulness • Approx 400 attended in total, 329 questionnaires returned • Day-time meetings best, most held at weekends

  12. Demographics

  13. Demographics

  14. Serology Testing

  15. Evaluation of Meetings • 86% found sessions very useful, 13% useful • 97% were happy with the format of the meetings, finding it a good way to learn • Others would have preferred information from their GP or Chinese support worker

  16. Serology

  17. Serology by Age

  18. Problems • GP sub-committee not consulted • ‘Unaware’ of project • Testing and referral, vaccination of contacts through primary care • Vaccination provided as ‘travel’ service – considerable cost to individuals

  19. ‘Resolution’ of Problems • Offered serology testing at RIE if GP unable • Negotiations with Bloodbourne Virus Committee re payment for vaccination of household contacts (£7/vaccination)

  20. Evaluation of Project • Overall well-received by Chinese community • Group-based meetings better attended than general public (advertised) • Diffusion model appeared to work • Chinese Hepatitis B clinic established at RIE (58 patients at conclusion of project) • < 1% DNA rate! • Printed bilingual leaflet for general use • Difficulty with local (primary care) politics

  21. National Screening for Hepatitis B • ‘Screening for Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C among ethnic minorities born outside the UK’ • August 2010, report for the National Screening Committee • Did not support screening

  22. Chronic Hepatitis B Case-finding • Systematic case-finding in high risk populations (health services identify and invite for test) • Opportunistic (testing offered to high risk individuals when make contact with health services for another reason) • Voluntary testing (eg at community venues)

  23. Systematic Screening – Research Required • Systems for identifying high risk patients from GP records and confirming country of birth • ? Difference in acceptability and number of cases found between systematic and opportunistic testing • What will uptake be for patients offered systematic screening?

  24. Systematic Screening – Research Required • Incremental cost-effectiveness of systemic over opportunistic testing • Proportion of HBV actually treated • Emigration of immigrants after testing and treatment • Effect of broadening criteria to country of origin rather than birth • No of cases HBV prevented by vaccination

  25. Personal Thoughts • Involvement of target community in organisation of project • Involvement of primary care as well as public health • Very little evidence but probably supports opportunistic case finding and voluntary testing sessions • Methodical screening should be set up as a formal pilot study

  26. Personal Thoughts • Think through whole process, from contact with population to vaccination or treatment • Use interpreters • Lunchtime meetings!

More Related