HCV Screening Rate Triples With Multifaceted Intervention

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A multifaceted intervention has tripled the rate of hepatitis C virus screening in a baby boomer population.

A multifaceted intervention has tripled the rate of hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening in a baby boomer population by focusing on obstacles at the provider and health care system level and reaching out to ethnically diverse and disadvantaged groups.

"Despite guidelines to provide universal screening to all baby boomers, this was not occurring in our health care system," Mamta Jain, MD, MPH, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Dallas, TX, told MD Magazine®.

"Most of the screening was risk based. Thus, there was a need to remind providers to screen even those who may not be perceived to be at risk, hence universal screening," Jain said. "We saw significant improvement in screening after implementation of our intervention."

In a study published in Hepatology, Jain and colleagues evaluated an intervention program with 3 main components: provider and patient education, electric medical records-enabled best practice alert to providers, and increased HCV clinic capacity to reduce the wait-time previously found to be an obstacle to accessing screening and treatment.

The program was implemented June 2015 at the Parkland Health & Hospital System, Dallas TX, a publicly funded safety-net health care system which includes a 900-bed hospital, outpatient specialty, and multiple primary care clinics located throughout Dallas County.

"We are aware that many health care systems have implemented best practice alerts or health maintenance documents to assist providers in screening baby boomers," Jain said. "We've added education to providers to make them aware of the program, and we also obtained feedback during those sessions."

The provider education was conducted in a one-time, in-person didactic session at each clinic for all providers in which the rationale for HCV screening in baby boomers and the process of ordering HCV antibody test was explained. The feedback sessions elicited reasons for provider reluctance to screen and refer patients for HCV treatment. The initial session was followed with yearly updates on the HCV screening rates.

The investigators reported that prior to the intervention, in the period between June 2013 and May 2015, 10.1% of 48,755 eligible baby boomer patients were screened. In the post-intervention study period between June 2015 and May 2017, 34.6% of 34,093 eligible baby boomers were screened.

Jain and colleagues noted that prior to the intervention, HCV screening was lower among older baby boomers, those with providers having larger patient loads, and in high-risk subgroups, including those with signs of liver disease. In the period after the program had been implemented, screening had increased in each of these groups.

"We found that busy providers gained the most benefit from our intervention as they increased screening significantly," Jain commented. "We also felt that older patients, those with co-morbidities, those engaged in care benefited from the intervention because screening increased in these groups."

The article, "Multifaceted Intervention Triples HCV Screening Rate," originally appeared on MDMag.com.

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