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HEPATITIS C ACTION PLAN FOR SCOTLAND(1) PRISON-BASED NEEDS ASSESSMENT Introduction Prisons can contribute to the control and management of the Hepatitis C epidemic in Scotland. SPS' commitment to the Hepatitis C Action Plan is clear, through relevant work on blood borne virus strategy, sexual health, health promotion and health protection. Purpose This document sets out ways in which prison and prison health care can contribute to: improving health and wellbeing of prisoners through prevention, treatment and care; improving public health through reducing the supply of and demand for injectable material, reducing harm from injecting, and reducing the risk to injecting partners and intimate partners; and reducing the harm from, and burden of care for, Hepatitis C in Scotland in the future. General Approach This document will concentrate on 2 matters: controlling the spread of Hepatitis C as a transmissible virus; and reducing harm from injecting drug use as the chief risk factor. Matters of sexual health, and the prevention of sexually transmitted infection is dealt with in a separate document circulated in 2005,(2) available on request. Hepatitis C in the Prison Population An estimated 17% of prisoners carry Hepatitis C. Estimated prevalence is highest in the 26-35 year category at 24% for men, and 38% for women(3)(4). A minority are aware of their infection, although good testing programmes now exist in long-term prisons and the ascertainment rate is rising towards the expected level. For a total prison population of 7,200, a prevalence rate of 17% means that there are approximately 1,700 Hepatitis C positive carriers in custody at any one time - almost 3% of the estimated prevalence Hepatitis C population in Scotland. Over one year, the figure is 3,700 or over 7.4% of the Hepatitis C positive Scottish population, in that approximately 22,000 individuals pass through prison in a year. Intravenous Drug Use (IDU) Prison is an incidental hazard in an IDU career. Of the Glasgow population, an IDU with a 10 year career can expect to have a 90% chance of being in prison during that time. For a (1) (2) (3) (4) Hepatitis C Action Plan for Scotland, Phase 1: August 2006-July 2008, Scottish Executive, August 2006 Sexual Health Status of Prisoners: Fraser A, Scottish Prison Service, May 2005 Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Associated Risk Factors Among Scottish Prison Inmates: A Cohort Study: Champion J K, 2004, American Journal of Epidemiology, Vol 159, No 5 Prevalence of Hepatitis C in Prisons: WASH-C Surveillance Linked to Self-Reported Risk Behaviours: Gore S M, 1999, QJ Med, 92:25-32 SLA00423.106 1. 2-5 year career, the figure is 75%(5). In a recent English study, half of IDUs in prison had been in custody before or around the time of starting to inject. Thirty per-cent of these IDUs had been in prison more than 6 times.(6) The prison population is 96% male.(7) However, the relatively few women have more severe problems in every respect, including IDU. In most other measures of Hepatitis C, epidemiological characteristics are likely to reflect the general population. There is strong evidence to suggest transmission of Hepatitis C in prison.(8) There is good evidence of needle use and needle sharing in prison. A consistent annual survey self-report figure of 3% reporting injecting, and 60-70% of them sharing (n=c.125) illustrate the scale of injecting.(9)(10) Qualitative data document wide sharing of injecting equipment by anything up to 20 users. Injecting is less frequent in prison than on the outside, but each injecting episode is probably a higher risk. Evidence is only anecdotal relating to IDUs starting their injecting career whilst in prison. Recent studies describe qualitatively the types of influence at work that encourage injecting. (11) Interventions There are several distinct groups of interventions that are specific to prison, and others to which prison can play a support role. The lead roles are as follows: health promotion, general and specific; prevention, both of injecting behaviour, and transmission of Hepatitis C; early detection through testing, opportunities of that contact; and primary prevention of other blood borne viruses through immunisation. together with educational and other Support roles include: referral to NHS specialist care, with set protocols for clinical investigation prior to first specialist consultation; commitment to follow-up in a manner similar to long-term conditions; sewing in the prison's commitment to Hepatitis C along with other aspects of rehabilitation and care, health and wellbeing. Health Promotion Relevant interventions of a general nature include programmes to build self-esteem, problem solving skills, cope with mental health problems, give relevant information about (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) Presentation made by Professor David Goldberg (Health Protection Scotland) at the 2003 (Chicago) Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (American Society for Microbiology); "Prisons as Amplification Systems for Infectious Diseases: Hepatitis C Virus Infection" Duncan G, Prison Health Research Network Conference, Manchester, October 2006 Annual Report 2005-06, Scottish Prison Service The Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Associated Risk Factors Among Scottish Prisoners: A Cohort Study: Champion J K, Taylor A, Hutchinson S J, Cameron S, McMenamin J, Mitchell A, Goldberg D J; The American Journal of Epidemiology, 2004; 159(5), 514-519 Annual Prisoner Survey 2005, Scottish Prison Service Annual Prisoner Survey 2006, Scottish Prison Service "Examining the Injecting Practices of Injecting Drug Users in Scotland": Taylor A et al, 2004, Effective Interventions Unit, Scottish Executive. Edinburgh SLA00423.106 2. general self-care, hygiene and health matters; a range of matters relating to wider life circumstances including housing and accommodation, basic life skills and employability. Underpinning these initiatives is the need to encourage prospects of sustaining a drug-free lifestyle through replacement with better prospects. Specific matters both relating to health promotion and harm reduction are addictions information, drugs information, availability of counselling and support services relating to drug and other addiction problems, resuscitation and management of overdose. Specific health promotion relating to Hepatitis C and injecting include information on injecting and hazards, all blood borne viruses, Hepatitis C, information on alcohol problems in general, poly-drug use especially with cocaine, and specifically relating to accelerating the process of cirrhosis. Disease Prevention On injecting behaviour, SPS will develop strategies which include those set out above to prevent prisoners starting an injecting career, or continuing an IDU career. SPS is currently proposing a pilot project to offer a full set of clean injecting equipment to those unable to discontinue the habit, as an avenue into treatment and non-injecting alternatives. Some prisons already provide a range of paraphernalia without specific injecting equipment for the purpose of harm reduction, although practice varies. Measures to prevent the transmission of Hepatitis C include methadone for opiatedependent addicts as part of a supported drug treatment programme - programmes of supported detoxification and other means of support for people with other addictions that involve IDU. There is evidence that methadone programmes continued for a sufficiently long time and adequately covering opiate craving will cut down the risk of re-entry into prison and improve health.(12) Currently, the Prison Service provides methadone substitution therapy to 17% of the prison population, in collaboration with outside prescribers. Eighty-three per cent say, on survey this year, that the programme controls their craving.(9) The matter of steroid injection and tattooing is not one that has recently been specifically addressed within Scottish prisons. Steroid injection is probably rare, and tattooing more common. Australian data suggests widespread tattooing practice in prison, with re-use of equipment.(13) Testing Testing for Hepatitis C, with associated counselling, has focused on prisoners in long-term establishments. These programmes are well established and organised. Elsewhere, approaches and commitments vary. A review has just been completed ( (14)Milne, 2006) and SPS intends to implement its recommendations to improve its commitment to Hepatitis C testing. Recommendations are attached in Annex A. Currently, prison yields 3% of testing activity in Scotland, and this proportion has progressively fallen over time. The report will stimulate standard good practice and a more structured approach. The opportunities presented by testing include a broader and deeper educational intervention for hundreds of prisoners, and an avenue into care for those who turn out to be Hepatitis C positive. Primary Prevention of Other Viruses SPS delivers an effective programme of Hepatitis B immunisation. For those who are shown to be Hepatitis C positive, it also offers Hepatitis A immunisation. Uptake rates of (12) (13) (14) Status Paper on Prisons, Drugs and Harm Reduction, May 2005, World Health Organisation (Europe) NSW Young People on Community Orders Health Survey 2003-2006 - Key Findings Report: Kenny D T, Nelson P, Butler T, Lennings C, Allerton M, Champion U, University of Sydney, Australia Detection of Hepatitis C in Scottish Prisons - An Audit of Current Practice: Milne D, July 2006 SLA00423.106 3. Hepatitis B vaccine are unevaluated but commitment is consistently high across prisons. Accurate data will be available in 2007. Improving Referral to NHS Specialist Care There are well established procedures for referral to Specialist care from prisons. Generally speaking, commitment and links are good. One prison has an in-reach clinic, while other prisons have out-reach clinics and appointment times from prison. Two long-term prison establishments (HM Prisons, Glenochil and Shotts) have established protocols for prereferral. This is an example of good practice and prison health services anticipate a steady rise in referral activity following the agreement of more open criteria for inclusion in antiviral treatment, from a low base. Commitment to Follow-Up Prisoners: (a) move often between prisons; and (b) all but a few are eventually released back into the community. Both of these offender movements are a challenge to continuity of care and constitute the biggest single step that the Prison Service could take in improving its commitment to prisoner patients with Hepatitis C.(15) Prevention, Treatment and Care in Context Care of a prisoner-patient who might have or carries Hepatitis C should be seen within the overall life circumstances, health and wellbeing, and prospects in the future. Overall commitment to holistic health, care and good prospects that lead away from injecting drug use and problem drinking are important components of successful management. The understanding of all prison staff of health issues, and health staff of prison issues, is an important contribution to success, and training is of high value. Monitoring and Performance Measurement The following measures might be suitable indicators of performance in prisons with key partners, relevant to the Hepatitis C Action Plan. Surveillance Both of testing activity and outcome, and the relative contribution of prison to national testing endeavours. Use of injecting equipment, opportunities to access clean and hygienic materials, adhere to good clean practices, and the converse. Use and sharing of unhygienic injecting equipment, including needles. Service Activity Growing trend of educational, testing and referral, prescribing and review activity. Information Sharing (a) (15) To support care; and P Bramley, Personal Communication, 2006 SLA00423.106 4. (b) to enhance surveillance. Research Research has either taken place in Scotland, or is planned in the following categories: empirical and interventional on IDU and Hepatitis C; observational research, both qualitative and quantitative; evaluation of planning interventions and specific screening plans; and cohort study describing continuing risk activity and the consequences. These are important measures that relate to outcomes, are infrequent but form the backdrop to performance measurement. Costs Staff clinical time, and training, is the main cost to the Prison Service. Lack of time, with other pressing priorities, has hampered efforts in the past. The main marginal costs would fall to specialist NHS clinical, laboratory and pharmacy resources. Priorities for Action The Scottish Prison Service is keen to work with NHS Boards and other agencies, including voluntary sector and contracted service providers to prisoners and offenders, to tackle the epidemic of Hepatitis C in Scotland. It has set up its own Hepatitis C National Forum to develop and co-ordinate action. The document above sets out possible interventions. Based on the capacity of prisoner patients to benefit, and the cost effectiveness of these interventions, we judge that priorities should be in the following areas: 1. long-term benefit, prevention and promotion of health, alternatives to injecting and harm reduction measures - to cut down transmission of the Hepatitis C virus; 2. medium-term benefit, through anticipatory care - routes that promote access to treatment and care, to include awareness of the virus, risks, consequences, treatment and care opportunities; (a) primary health treatment and care; (b) care and interventions to control excessive alcohol intake; (c) referral and investigation protocol with specialist services; and (d) better care of the long-term condition of Hepatitis C. Components include well managed movement of prisoners between settings, information sharing to support direct patient care, public health and surveillance, management of resources, clinical protocols for the local management of the jaundiced patient, and involvement of patients in decisions about their care 3. immediate survival and epidemic benefit from reducing harm of injection drug use - adequate drug and alcohol problem services. SLA00423.106 5. Conclusion The Scottish Prison Service is committed to the prevention, treatment and care of people with Hepatitis C. It aims to make its contribution to: promote health equity - of access, experience and outcomes; reduce the cost of late stage disease through earlier intervention; and reduce age-specific mortality through death soon after release and in later life. The document sets the scene, describes current work and planning priorities and underlines its commitment to work in partnership. Several hundred prisoner-patients could start to benefit from testing into treatment. Thousands of prisoners and staff could live and work in a safer environment. Full engagement of health services with the prisons could improve the outlook for public health and care in Hepatitis C. SLA00423.106 6. ANNEX A RECOMMENDATIONS FROM HEPATITIS C SCREENING REVIEW REPORT 2006(14) Short-Term Actions Within 12 Months 1. As much of the health care within SPS is nurse led, consideration should be given to establishing a BBV Nurses' Forum to provide opportunities for training, education, evidence review and development of best practice. 2. All establishments should assess their current practice against the criteria used in this audit to identify promising practice and gaps in service. 3. Existing local protocols should be adapted for national use across SPS to support the implementation of the SPS Health Care Standards. 4. Prior to developing an action plan for SPS based upon the above recommendations, consultation should take place with the relevant NHS Consultants and Health Board Planning Departments providing Specialist Hepatitis C treatment services to fully consider the implications of the above. 5. Improvements should be made to the recording of tests and vaccinations relating to blood borne viruses within individual prisoner health care records. 6. Consideration should be given to the introduction of the accelerated programme of Hepatitis B vaccination across SPS. Medium-Term Actions Within 2 Years 1. A targeted screening programme for Hepatitis C should be phased in to Scottish prisons beginning with former and current IDUs within long stay establishments, and IDUs in short stay establishments with a sentence of more than 12 months. Lessons from this should be considered prior to targeting IDUs with shorter sentences. 2. All establishments should be required to provide a BBV service, either through dedicated clinics or skills in the form of nurse specialists; this service should have effective links with local NHS treatment providers. If this cannot be achieved locally, national agreements should be sought through NHS Scotland and the Director of Health and Care at SPS. 3. Evaluation of a screening programme should include questions to determine prisoner acceptability and reasons for uptake to learn lessons for possible wider implementation. 4. Data collection methods should be standardised and collated monthly for submission to SPS Headquarters who should collate the data, provide additional commentary on epidemiology across other settings in Scotland and share across appropriate SPS staff annually. This may not be required if the forthcoming National Hepatitis C database can take on this role - this requires further investigation. 5. Further consideration needs to be given to effective educational and awareness programmes within prisons which reduce initiation into injecting practices as this is a clear expectation of SPS within the proposed Hepatitis C action plan in Scotland. Other harm reduction measures shown to be effective in the community should be considered for implementation, including injecting equipment exchange and condom provision. SLA00423.106 7. ANNEX B REFERENCES (1) Hepatitis C Action Plan for Scotland, Phase 1: August 2006-July 2008, Scottish Executive, August 2006 (2) Sexual Health Status of Prisoners: Fraser A, Scottish Prison Service, May 2005 (3) Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Associated Risk Factors Among Scottish Prison Inmates: A Cohort Study: Champion J K, 2004, American Journal of Epidemiology, Vol 159, No 5 (4) Prevalence of Hepatitis C in Prisons: WASH-C Surveillance Linked to Self-Reported Risk Behaviours: Gore S M, 1999, QJ Med, 92:25-32 (5) Presentation made by Professor David Goldberg (Health Protection Scotland) at the 2003 (Chicago) Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (American Society for Microbiology); "Prisons as Amplification Systems for Infectious Diseases: Hepatitis C Virus Infection" (6) Duncan G, Prison Health Research Network Conference, Manchester, October 2006 (7) Annual Report 2005-06, Scottish Prison Service (8) The Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Associated Risk Factors Among Scottish Prisoners: A Cohort Study: Champion J K, Taylor A, Hutchinson S J, Cameron S, McMenamin J, Mitchell A, Goldberg D J; The American Journal of Epidemiology, 2004; 159(5), 514-519 (9) Annual Prisoner Survey 2005, Scottish Prison Service (10) Annual Prisoner Survey 2006, Scottish Prison Service (11) "Examining the Injecting Practices of Injecting Drug Users in Scotland": Taylor A et al, 2004, Effective Interventions Unit, Scottish Executive. Edinburgh (12) Status Paper on Prisons, Drugs and Harm Reduction, May 2005, World Health Organisation (Europe) (13) NSW Young People on Community Orders Health Survey 2003-2006 - Key Findings Report: Kenny D T, Nelson P, Butler T, Lennings C, Allerton M, Champion U, University of Sydney, Australia (14) Detection of Hepatitis C in Scottish Prisons - An Audit of Current Practice: Milne D, July 2006 (15) P Bramley, Personal Communication, 2006 SLA00423.106 8.