1. Sharing the cure: Building primary care and public health infrastructure to improve the hepatitis C care continuum in Maryland
- Author
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Onyeka Anaedozie, Mark S. Sulkowski, Ca Saundra Bush, Hope Cassidy-Stewart, Tolu Arowolo, Oluwaseun Falade-Nwulia, David L. Thomas, Jeffrey C Hitt, Lauren Canary, Boatemaa Ntiri-Reid, Tracy Agee, Juhi Moon, Mary Kleinman, Michael T. Melia, Noele P. Nelson, Risha Irvin, Alexander J. Millman, Lucy E. Wilson, and Sherilyn Brinkley
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepacivirus ,Primary care ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Maryland ,Primary Health Care ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Public health ,Hepatitis C ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,medicine.disease ,Care Continuum ,Infectious Diseases ,Family medicine ,Workforce ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Public Health ,Birth cohort ,business ,Healthcare providers ,Medicaid - Abstract
In 2014, trained health care provider capacity was insufficient to deliver care to an estimated 70,000 persons in Maryland with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. The goal of Maryland Community Based Programs to Test and Cure Hepatitis C, a public health implementation project, was to improve HCV treatment access by expanding the workforce. Sharing the Cure (STC) was a package of services deployed 10/1/14 to 9/30/18 that included enhanced information technology and public health infrastructure, primary care provider training, and practice transformation. Nine primary care sites enrolled. HCV clinical outcomes were documented among individuals who presented for care at sites and met criteria for HCV testing including risk factor or birth cohort (born between 1945 and 1965) based testing. Fifty-three providers completed the STC training. STC providers identified 3,237 HCV antibody positive patients of which 2,624 (81%) were RNA+. Of those HCV RNA+, 1,739 (66%) were staged, 932 (36%) were prescribed treatment, 838 (32%) started treatment, 721 (28%) completed treatment, and 543 (21%) achieved cure. Among 1,739 patients staged, 693 (40%) patients had a liver fibrosis assessment score < F2, rendering them ineligible for treatment under Maryland Medicaid guidelines. HCV RNA testing among HCV antibody positive people increased from 40% (baseline) to 95% amongst STC providers. Of 554 patients with virologic data reported, 543 (98%) achieved cure. Primary care practices can effectively serve as HCV treatment centers to expand treatment access. However, criteria by insurance providers in Maryland was a major barrier to treatment.
- Published
- 2020
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