319329
An International Perspective on Using Medication-Assisted Therapy of Opioid Dependence to Improve Hepatitis C Virus Infection Prevention and Care for People Who Inject Drugs: Structural Barriers and Public Health Potential
Description: We examined programmatic, structural and policy considerations relevant to using MAT to improve HCV control in 3 countries—the United States, Estonia and Viet Nam.
Lessons Learned: In each country a range of interconnected factors affects the use MAT as a component of HCV control. These factors include 1) that MAT is not yet provided on the scale needed to adequately address illicit opioid dependence, 2) inconsistent use of MAT as a platform for HCV services, 3) high costs of HCV treatment and health insurance policies that affect both MAT and HCV treatment access, and 4) the stigmatization of drug use.
Recommendations: The following appear to be important for controlling HCV transmission among PWID: 1) maintaining current HIV prevention efforts, 2) expanding efforts to reduce the stigmatization of drug use, 3) expanding MAT as part of a coordinated public health approach to opioid dependence, and HIV and HCV control efforts, 4) reductions in HCV treatment costs and expanded health system coverage to allow population level HCV treatment as prevention. The global expansion of MAT and its use as a platform for HCV services should be both a feasible next step in the public health response to the HCV epidemic, and is likely to be critical in efforts to eliminate or eradicate HCV.
Learning Areas:
Planning of health education strategies, interventions, and programsPublic health or related public policy
Public health or related research
Learning Objectives:
Discuss potential role of medication-assisted treatment in the public health response to hepatitis C virus infection.
Discuss potential barriers and facilitators to implementing medication-assisted treatment as a component of hepatitis C virus infection control.
Keyword(s): Drug Abuse Treatment, Hepatitis C
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: Extensive expertise in the management and treatment of substance abuse and related infections (including TB, HIV, HCV). Extensive expertise in the epidemiology and public health policy related to drug use, HIV, HCV, and MAT/NSP and combined prevention programming.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.