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Assessing the impact of a nurse-delivered home dried blood spot service on uptake of testing for household contacts of hepatitis B-infected pregnant women across two London trusts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2016

P. KEEL*
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
G. EDWARDS
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
J. FLOOD
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
G. NIXON
Affiliation:
North East and North Central London Health Protection Team, Public Health England, UK
K. BEEBEEJAUN
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
J. SHUTE
Affiliation:
Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
J. POH
Affiliation:
Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
A. MILLAR
Affiliation:
North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust, UK
S. IJAZ
Affiliation:
Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
J. PARRY
Affiliation:
Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
S. MANDAL
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
M. RAMSAY
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
G. AMIRTHALINGAM
Affiliation:
Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Mr P. Keel, Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance & Control (CIDSC), Public Health England, 61 Colindale Avenue, Colindale, London NW9 5EQ, UK. (Email: philip.keel@phe.gov.uk)
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Summary

Despite national guidance recommending testing and vaccination of household contacts of hepatitis B-infected pregnant women, provision and uptake of this is sub-optimal. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of in-home dried blood spot (DBS) testing to increase testing and vaccination of household contacts of hepatitis B-infected pregnant women as an alternative approach to conventional primary-care follow-up. The study was conducted across two London maternity trusts (North Middlesex and Newham). All hepatitis B surface antigen-positive pregnant women identified through these trusts were eligible for inclusion. The intervention of in-home DBS testing for household contacts was introduced at North Middlesex Trust from November 2010 to December 2011. Data on testing and vaccination uptake from GP records across the two trusts were compared between baseline (2009) and intervention (2010–2011) periods. In-home DBS service increased testing uptake for all ages (P < 0·001) with the biggest impact seen in partners, where testing increased from 30·3% during the baseline period to 96·6% during the intervention period in North Middlesex Trust. Although impact on vaccine uptake was less marked, improvements were observed for adults. The provision of nurse-led home-based DBS may be useful in areas of high prevalence.

Information

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 
Figure 0

Table 1. Case demographic information for all groups

Figure 1

Table 2. Contact information for all groups, and follow-up status

Figure 2

Table 3. Number of household contacts tested by relationship status to the case and their outcomes depending on the results of this testing

Figure 3

Table 4. Genotype distribution in the index case ethnic groups [North Middlesex Prospective (DBS) group only]