The overarching goal of this study is to develop a peer-based care coordination intervention for individuals with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) who were recently released from correctional settings to promote linkage to and retention in HCV care. The investigators will assess the existing barriers and facilitators of HCV treatment initiation, HCV treatment completion, and sustained virologic response among individuals recently released from a U.S. jail or prisons in a randomized control trial. This study will assess the feasibility and process measures of a peer-enhanced HCV care coordination intervention among recently incarcerated individuals.
The proposed 2-year study will be a block stratified, randomized controlled trial. Once consented and enrolled, participants will be randomly assigned to either the peer-enhanced intervention or referred to standard clinical care. The investigators will enroll 80 former inmates with chronic HCV who have been released from incarceration within the past 6 months. It is expected that enrollment will be completed by the fourth quarter of the first year. This will allow sufficient time for HCV treatment uptake, completion, determination of Sustained Virologic Response (SVR), and assessment of reinfection. Individual participant follow-up will be 3 months on average for treatment, 3 months for SVR, and 3 months to assess for reinfection. Elucidating the barriers and facilitators in the re-entry care cascade (as well as how they may be overcome) will be critical in designing sustainable models of care for HCV-infected former inmates. The investigators hypothesize that a peer-enhanced strategy will be more effective than standard referral in improving linkage to, and retention in, HCV care among individuals recently released from correctional settings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
80
Peer mentors will contact participants within 72 hours of enrollment to discuss the early release period, gauge their readiness for HCV treatment, and identify ancillary needs. They will also accompany the participant to their first medical appointment with an HCV provider and any future appointments if requested by the participant. Peer mentors will offer participants social support throughout the 6 months they are enrolled in the study.
Passive referral to a HCV provider
Prisma Health-Upstate
Greenville, South Carolina, United States
RECRUITINGLinkage to care
A visit with an HCV treatment provider
Time frame: 6 months
HCV treatment initiation
Initiating HCV treatment and the number of days following release from the correctional setting to initiation of HCV treatment
Time frame: up to 3 months after linkage to care
Treatment completion
Completing HCV treatment, as determined by EMR
Time frame: up to 3 months after treatment initiation
HCV cure
Achieving HCV cure, as determined by EMR
Time frame: 3 months after treatment completion
Reinfection
Determined by EMR
Time frame: 12 months after treatment completion
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