1. Evaluation of factors affecting patients' refusal of HCV treatment in a cohort of Egyptian patients.
- Author
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Hashem MB, Badary HA, Mahfouz NA, Adel S, Alboraie M, AbdAllah M, AlAkel W, Saeed R, Ammar I, Abdel-Razek W, Hassany M, and Esmat G
- Subjects
- Humans, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Hepacivirus, Egypt epidemiology, Treatment Outcome, Hepatitis C, Chronic drug therapy, Hepatitis C drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Treatment refusal, defined as active refusal of a patient to receive treatment despite physician recommendations, has not been extensively evaluated before in hepatitis C virus in the era of direct acting antivirals., Objective: To investigate the reasons for refusal to receive hepatitis C virus treatment in Egypt., Methods: an observational study conducted between July 2018 and November 2019 in Egypt. Enrollment was done to all patients who refused to get hepatitis C virus treatment during the national screening and treatment campaign. Reasons for their refusal were identified using a questionnaire as an instrument for data collection., Results: Out of the 220 280 Egyptian hepatitis C virus patients who did not show up to start treatment and were contacted to get therapy, only 84 patients (0.038%) refused to receive treatment. The main reason for their refusal was having concerns about treatment (82.14%) and their main concern was the fear of adverse events (85.5%). Other causes of refusal were non-satisfactory experience at treatment centers (13.09%) and patients preferred to receive complementary and alternative medicines (4.7%). Most patients (65.4%) trusted the efficacy of directly acting antivirals for hepatitis C. None of the study participants was found to suffer from any psychiatric morbidity and the average score of the GHQ-12 was 10.7155., Conclusion: Proper health education and awareness regarding hepatitis C virus treatment safety and efficacy is needed to increase treatment acceptance rates., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Faculty of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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