The University of New South Wales

Hepatitis C and illicit and injecting drug use

The National Centre in HIV Social Research’s hepatitis C research program started in 1999 and has grown substantially since then to focus on a wide range of work related to hepatitis and illicit drug use. Our program focuses on issues of hepatitis C prevention, vaccines, and experiences of and decisions about treatment, support and care. Beyond that, we are also interested in the use of illicit and injecting drugs, as drug injecting is the primary route of transmission of hepatitis C in Australia. Our work in this area includes behavioural surveillance research of people who inject drugs and young people who use illicit drugs. We also have interests in research on the experience and delivery of drug treatment.

Much of our work is supported by strong partnerships with Hepatitis Australia, the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League, and their respective state and territory member organisations. What often differentiates our work on hepatitis C and drug use from that conducted by other research organisations is our focus on consumer experiences and the social contexts of drug use, hepatitis C infection and treatment. This has allowed us to work with our community and government partners to suggest innovative approaches to education, prevention and service delivery e.g. blood awareness for hepatitis C prevention, mindfulness of injecting practice, consumer participation in drug treatment.

injecting gear tattooed man

 

Current projects
Selected past projects
Contacts

For more information please contact Associate Professor Carla Treloar, Head, Hepatitis C Program.


 

Project descriptions

Periodic surveys of drug use among young people

Bryant and Treloar

Monitoring of drug use among young people is largely limited to secondary school surveys from which older youths are excluded, or large population surveys that tend to underrepresent people who live in unstable situations, such as young people. This project complements those other surveys by collecting data on the drug use of young people who attend music festivals, young people who are beyond school age and in a changeable time of life. Annual surveys of young people recruited from music festivals (mainly the Big Day Out) provide data on their recent licit and illicit use of drugs, their knowledge of how hepatitis C is transmitted, their attitudes to drug use and the contexts in which they use. The first round of data collection was carried out in January 2004; the most recent, in January 2007 at the Big Day Out in Sydney, was the fourth time data has been collected. Extensive planning was undertaken during 2007 to expand data collection to Queensland and Victoria in 2008.

Top

National treatment service users project, Phase 2

Bryant, Treloar and Ellard

The aim of this study is to implement the specific recommendations of Phase 1 of the Treatment Service Users Project which are to evaluate the suitability and impact of a consumer participation program within various drug treatment settings and to convene a workshop to bring together key stakeholders with the purpose of developing a nationally agreed definition and model of consumer participation to be used at the policy and service delivery level.

Phase 1 of the National Treatment Service Users Project showed that there was a high level of support from service users and providers for implementing a consumer participation program within drug treatment services. Phase 2 will evaluate the feasibility of operating a consumer participation program within drug treatment settings. Five treatment services will be selected to participate in a four- to six-month demonstration project. Qualitative data will be collected from staff and consumers of each service at the beginning and end of the demonstration period to ascertain the perceived suitability and impact of the consumer participation program. Data collection and preliminary data analysis will take place in 2008. This study is a partnership between NCHSR and the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League.

Top

An investigation into the factors influencing the decision about whether or not to take up treatment for Hepatitis C

Bryant, Treloar and Hopwood

This project uses both quantitative and qualitative methods to determine the factors that influence people’s decisions about whether or not to undertake treatment for hepatitis C. A quantitative survey will elucidate factors relating to knowledge and perceptions of treatment and its impact on everyday life. A qualitative interview, which will seek to explore in detail the issues raised in the survey schedule, will be developed. The project focuses on two broad groups of people with hepatitis C: current and former injecting drug users and people with bleeding disorders. The project method and instruments were developed in 2007 and data will be collected in 2008.

Top

Post-treatment outcomes study: Exploration of psychosocial impacts following completion of interferon-based treatment for hepatitis C virus infection

Hopwood

The aim of this project is to explore and describe the period following completion of interferon-based treatment for hepatitis C infection with a focus on documenting persistent treatment-related psychiatric and physical after-effects.

Recently, significantly increased numbers of people have sort treatment for hepatitis C infection in Australia in line with public health efforts to increase treatment access. This therapeutic regimen is associated with significant physical and psychiatric impacts and many people discontinue treatment as a result. Over the past decade anecdotal reports and a small amount of published clinical literature have sited persistent neuro-toxicity resulting in manic depression and other ongoing psychiatric and physical adverse events from interferon-based treatments among people who have both successfully completed treatment and discontinued treatment. This qualitative study will use in-depth semi-structured interviews to explore and describe the persistent impacts of interferon-based treatments for hepatitis C infection among a diverse sample of thirty people who have completed treatment during the previous year.

Top

The real deal in hepatitis C prevention: automatic influences on injecting behaviour

Treloar

Phase 1 of this project involved collecting video recordings of clients injecting at the Sydney Medically Supervised Injecting Centre and then conducting interviews with these clients after they had reviewed the video footage of their injecting episode. Phase 2 of the project, funded by NSW Health, began in 2007. A series of focus groups was held with people who inject drugs. In these groups, participants reviewed the video material and findings of Phase 1 with the aim of developing peer education messages to use within their injecting networks. Participants trialled these messages within their networks and then attended subsequent groups to discuss the effectiveness of these messages and modify the interventions. In 2009, the data collected in Phase 1 and 2 will be used to develop a model of peer education for use with people who inject drugs.  The development of this model will be conducted in partnership with NUAA.

The goal of this project was to develop effective hepatitis C prevention messages as well as to provide data for the development of a peer education model for blood-borne virus prevention among people who inject drugs.

Top

Under construction: the social and cultural politics of hepatitis C in Australia

Treloar

This project aims to investigate the ways in which hepatitis C is being constituted as a disease medically, socially and culturally in Australia to develop insights into how it might be confronted both medically and socially without further stigmatising those affected by it. To this end, the aims of the project include addressing the following questions: What disease concepts are being mobilised to make sense of and act on hepatitis C? What metaphors are circulating in relation to the disease? How does hepatitis C’s symbolic and practical associations with injecting drug use (IDU) and HIV act to construct the disease both conceptually and materially? How do the wide diversity of symptoms and prognoses related to hepatitis C impact on the way the disease is understood both at a cultural level and among affected individuals?

Top

Hepatitis C seroconversion: Using qualitative research to enhance surveillance

Treloar and Ellard

The aim of this qualitative project will be conducted over two phases: 1. mapping exercise to identify and assess potential recruitment sites and pilot study of selected cases (2007-2008); 2 targeted study designed to inform development of HCV seroconversion surveillance mechanism (2008-2009).

Little is known about events surrounding hepatitis C seroconversion.  In-depth qualitative exploration of these events and circumstances will assist with interpretation of surveillance data and development of hepatitis C prevention programs.

Top

Pharmacy needle and syringe survey 2007: hepatitis C risk and access to sterile injecting equipment in pharmacies in south-east Sydney

Bryant, Hopwood, Treloar, Brener and Hull

Little is known about an estimated significant proportion of injecting drug users who do not access equipment and information from needle and syringe programs, but instead use pharmacies for this purpose. An exploratory study was conducted in 2006 which combined qualitative and quantitative methods to explore and critique commonly held assumptions that appear in the published research into illicit drugs regarding access to injecting equipment and information about harm.

This study showed that a considerable proportion of people attending pharmacies for Fitpacks were engaging in injecting practices that put them at risk for acquiring or transmitting hepatitis C and HIV, and that those at suburban pharmacies were potentially at increased risk. In 2007 additional funding was obtained from NSW Health to expand this study to include other areas in New South Wales. Quantitative data were collected from 36 pharmacies in metropolitan and regional areas of the state, which generated a sample size of over 700 participants. A report of the study is due in the latter part of 2008. It is also envisaged that this research will be expanded to include a national sample.

Top

UNSW hepatitis C vaccine initiative: knowledge of and willingness to participate in vaccine trials

Treloar

This large project was funded from the UNSW Strategic Research Fund and includes social and epidemiological studies, clinical studies and laboratory-based immunology and virology studies. The component conducted by NCHSR involves a qualitative investigation of the knowledge of hepatitis C vaccine trials among people who inject drugs, and of the factors that would influence their decision to take part in such a trial. Data for this project are sourced from injecting drug users, representatives of services tailored to people who inject drugs, and medical staff involved in their health care. Participants’ knowledge about hepatitis C and its potential impact on the lives of injecting drug users was ascertained, as was their knowledge of and perceptions about vaccine trails. This phase of the project will extend into 2008.

Top


 

Past project descriptions

Comparing the role of takeaways in methadone maintenance treatment in New South Wales and Victoria

Kippax, Treloar and Fraser

New South Wales and Victoria have very different policies concerning ‘takeaway’ methadone (methadone consumed at home rather than on clinic or pharmacy premises). This three-year project, funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council, compared these two policy environments by interviewing methadone clients, dosing nurses, dispensing pharmacists, prescribing doctors and drug policy makers. It also investigated the social and cultural meanings given to takeaways by clients and workers, and the circumstances under which diversion of methadone to street sale takes place. The purpose of this study was to better understand the significance of takeaways to clients and workers, and to provide recommendations for future policy.

This highly successful project was completed during 2007. A number of refereed journal articles have been published. The report: 'Methadone maintenance treatment in New South Wales and Victoria: takeaways, diversion and other key issues', was launched at the Australasian Professional Society for Alcohol and Drugs Conference in Auckland in November 2007 and the book from this project: 'Substance and Substitution : Methadone Subjects in Liberal Societies' by Suzanne Fraser and Kylie Valentine was published in early 2008.

Top

Barriers and incentives to drug treatment for illicit drug users with mental health comorbidities and complex vulnerabilities

Treloar, Holt and Kippax

This study used qualitative research methodology to provide contextual, in-depth information about barriers and incentives to treatment by illicit drug users with common mental health problems and complex vulnerabilities. The project was the continuation of a collaborative partnership between NCHSR, the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League (AIVL) and LMS Consulting. Seventyseven illicit drug users with histories of depression and/or anxiety participated in interviews at four sites across Australia. In addition, 18 service providers from the drug and alcohol, mental health and community sectors were interviewed. A report for the Australian Government: 'Barriers and incentives to treatment for illicit drug users with mental health comorbidities and complex vulnerabilities', was published 2007. A number of peer reviewed articles will be published in based on findings from the study.

Top

An analysis of 'blood awareness' for the purposes of hepatitis C prevention, education and health promotion

Treloar

The promotion of ‘blood awareness’ has been identified as a key strategy for containing the spread of blood-borne viruses. However, the development of a heightened awareness of blood as a source of infection requires consideration of many sensitive social and health implications, such as increased phobias about blood, which can be linked to discrimination around injecting drug use, and racial, ethnic and sexual identity categories. This study aims to identify the different ways in which individuals and communities of individuals relate to their own blood and the blood of others, to determine the extent to which understandings of blood play a role in HCV transmission and thus its prevention, and to produce a typology of the ways in which blood can be characterised for effective health promotion. Seventy-eight interviews were completed and preliminary analysis of some of the data has taken place. Data collection and analysis was completed in 2003. Funds were obtained from NSW Health to conduct a research feedback session in May 2003 with 100 stakeholders from around NSW invited to consider the project’s results and innovations in health promotion and to discuss the NSW Health Promotion Plan for Hepatitis C. Also, the report: 'Blood awareness in hepatitis C prevention', was launched in October 2003 and a number of publications produced in 2004.

Top

The 3D project: Diagnosis, disclosure, discrimination and living with Hepatitis C

Hopwood

The aim of the 3D Project was to explore the experiences of diagnosis, disclosure and discrimination of people living with hepatitis C. The study involved quantitative and qualitative research components with Phase One consisting of a self administered short form questionnaire (n = 504) that focused on three main areas. These were: the impacts of a positive HCV diagnosis on people’s relationships, work and interactions with health care service providers; the impacts and outcomes of disclosing a HCV positive serostatus; and discrimination and its effects on those living with hepatitis C, including one’s ability and desire to access health care. Analysis of these data provided a clear framework for formulating question areas explored during Phase Two. Phase Two of the 3D project comprised the qualitative component, consisting of in-depth semi-structured interviews with (n = 19) people with hepatitis C. This was a comparative study of experiences of diagnosis, disclosure and discrimination and the role of social support in relation to these. Data analysis for this project was completed in 2003 and a report: 'The 3D Project: diagnosis, disclosure, discrimination and living with hepatitis C', launched in October 2003. A number of papers have been published from this study.

Top

Initiation and Transition to Injecting Drug Use among Young People

Treloar

The study documents the history of the initiation and transition to injecting among a range of current injectors 25 years and under, and the relationship between the circumstances of the initial injecting episode and current risk practices with respect to transmission of hepatitis C. The study is original in its focus on transition and initiation and the multiple contexts in which these take place; the range of networks to be studied; the varieties of drugs studied; and the exploration of the interpersonal, subcultural and physical contexts in which young people inject drugs. The project is a collaboration between researchers, educators and clinicians—Ted Noffs Foundation, the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre UNSW, NSW Users and AIDS Association (NUAA), Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League (AIVL), and Kirketon Road Clinic. The study was expanded with the addition of a Northern Rivers arm in 2001. The report: 'Risk for hepatitis C: transition and initiation to injecting drug use among youth in a range of injecting drug user networks', was launched in 2003 with significant media coverage. Papers arising from the study have been written for publication.

Top

 

Join an NCHSR study

The following projects are currently seeking research participants:
Hepatitis C post-treatment survey
E-male survey
‘Talk about Sex?’

Research plan

For more details on our research program, download our current workplan.

2007 Work plan