Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known about the emotional experience and benefits of undertaking direct acting antiviral (DAA) treatment for hepatitis C. A better understanding of individual treatment outcomes can inform acceptable treatment delivery and promotion. We aimed to explore participant-perceived emotional benefits and transformations throughout DAA treatment among people who inject drugs, who were initiating treatment.MethodsParticipants were recruited from either a community based clinical trial or community health clinics. Semi structured interviews were conducted with each participant before, during and following treatment. Interviews focussed on treatment perceptions, physical and mental wellbeing and modifiable health behaviours. Interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed. Participant and cohort matrices were produced to assess at which time point themes were present and whether themes changed or remained stable over time.ResultsThis paper presents analysis from 19 participants interviewed between 2017–2019. Most participants were male, with no or mild fibrosis. At baseline, all but one participant had injected drugs in the past month. Three themes relating to the emotional wellbeing and behaviour change described a common treatment experience; ‘hopes for better wellbeing’, ‘lifting the weight’ and ‘closing the chapter’. Participants were hopeful treatment would improve their emotional wellbeing. Hopes were actualised during treatment as participants began to feel uncertainty and stress easing. Completing treatment improved some participants perceptions of self. Some participants consciously changed their injecting behaviours during treatment.ConclusionUndertaking and completing treatment was an emotionally and behaviourally transformative period. Participant perceived benefits should be used to inform how treatment benefit is conceptualised and how treatment is promoted in primary care settings.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference49 articles.
1. World Health Organization. Global Hepatitis Report 2017. Geneva; 2017. Report No.: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.
2. “Eyes wide shut”: Narratives of women living with hepatitis C in Australia.;B Crockett;Women Health,2004
3. The impact of hepatitis C on health related quality of life: A systematic review and quantitative assessment;BM Spiegel;Gastroenterology,2005
4. Symptom prevalence and clustering of symptoms in people living with chronic hepatitis C infection;CA Lang;J Pain Symptom Manage,2006
5. Eradication of hepatitis C infection: The importance of targeting people who inject drugs;M Hellard;Hepatology,2014