Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration

Abstract Background Prisoners carry a greater burden of physical, communicable and psychiatric disease compared to the general population. Prison health care structures are complex and provide challenges and opportunities to engage a marginalised and poorly served group with health care including He...

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Main Authors: D. Crowley, M. C. Van Hout, C. Murphy, E. Kelly, J. S. Lambert, W. Cullen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:BMC Nursing
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-019-0347-x
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spelling doaj-b48ce7310a6941e5ab5955923a97fbe32020-11-25T02:17:09ZengBMCBMC Nursing1472-69552019-06-0118111010.1186/s12912-019-0347-xHepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative explorationD. Crowley0M. C. Van Hout1C. Murphy2E. Kelly3J. S. Lambert4W. Cullen5Irish College of General PractitionersPublic Health Institute, Liverpool John Moore’s UniversityIrish Prison ServiceIrish Prison ServiceDepartment of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Mater Misericordiae University HospitalSchool of Medicine, University College DublinAbstract Background Prisoners carry a greater burden of physical, communicable and psychiatric disease compared to the general population. Prison health care structures are complex and provide challenges and opportunities to engage a marginalised and poorly served group with health care including Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) screening, assessment and treatment. Optimising HCV management in prisons is a public health priority. Nurses are the primary healthcare providers in most prisons globally. Understanding the barriers and facilitators to prisoners engaging in HCV care from the perspectives of nurses is the first step in implementing effective strategies to eliminate HCV from prison settings. The aim of this study was to identify the barriers and facilitators to HCV screening and treatment in Irish prisons from a nurse perspective and inform the implementation of a national prison-based HCV screening program. Methods A qualitative study using focus group methodology underpinned by grounded theory for analysis in a national group of nurse managers (n = 12). Results The following themes emerged from the analysis; security and safety requirements impacting patient access, staffing and rostering issues, prison nurses’ skill set and concerns around phlebotomy, conflict between maintaining confidentiality and concerns for personal safety, peer workers, prisoners’ lack of knowledge, fear of treatment and stigma, inter-prison variations in prisoner health needs and health service delivery and priority, linkage to care, timing of screening and stability of prison life. Conclusions Prison nurses are uniquely placed to identify barriers and facilitators to HCV screening and treatment in prisoners and inform changes to health care practice and policy that will optimise the public health opportunity that incarceration provides.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-019-0347-x
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. Crowley
M. C. Van Hout
C. Murphy
E. Kelly
J. S. Lambert
W. Cullen
spellingShingle D. Crowley
M. C. Van Hout
C. Murphy
E. Kelly
J. S. Lambert
W. Cullen
Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
BMC Nursing
author_facet D. Crowley
M. C. Van Hout
C. Murphy
E. Kelly
J. S. Lambert
W. Cullen
author_sort D. Crowley
title Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
title_short Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
title_full Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
title_fullStr Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
title_full_unstemmed Hepatitis C virus screening and treatment in Irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
title_sort hepatitis c virus screening and treatment in irish prisons from nurse managers’ perspectives - a qualitative exploration
publisher BMC
series BMC Nursing
issn 1472-6955
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background Prisoners carry a greater burden of physical, communicable and psychiatric disease compared to the general population. Prison health care structures are complex and provide challenges and opportunities to engage a marginalised and poorly served group with health care including Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) screening, assessment and treatment. Optimising HCV management in prisons is a public health priority. Nurses are the primary healthcare providers in most prisons globally. Understanding the barriers and facilitators to prisoners engaging in HCV care from the perspectives of nurses is the first step in implementing effective strategies to eliminate HCV from prison settings. The aim of this study was to identify the barriers and facilitators to HCV screening and treatment in Irish prisons from a nurse perspective and inform the implementation of a national prison-based HCV screening program. Methods A qualitative study using focus group methodology underpinned by grounded theory for analysis in a national group of nurse managers (n = 12). Results The following themes emerged from the analysis; security and safety requirements impacting patient access, staffing and rostering issues, prison nurses’ skill set and concerns around phlebotomy, conflict between maintaining confidentiality and concerns for personal safety, peer workers, prisoners’ lack of knowledge, fear of treatment and stigma, inter-prison variations in prisoner health needs and health service delivery and priority, linkage to care, timing of screening and stability of prison life. Conclusions Prison nurses are uniquely placed to identify barriers and facilitators to HCV screening and treatment in prisoners and inform changes to health care practice and policy that will optimise the public health opportunity that incarceration provides.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-019-0347-x
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