Peer interventions for hepatitis C testing and treatment in OECD countries : a systematic scoping review
Daly, Sorcha and Reid, Leila and Buchanan, Ryan and McCulloch, Peter and Flowers, Paul and Frankis, Jamie and Vojt, Gabriele (2026) Peer interventions for hepatitis C testing and treatment in OECD countries : a systematic scoping review. Journal of Viral Hepatitis, 33 (2). e70130. ISSN 1365-2893 (https://doi.org/10.1111/jvh.70130)
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Abstract
Services delivered by peer workers (people with lived/living experience) are recommended to find, test, and treat those at risk of hepatitis C (HCV). However, there is a lack of knowledge around the characteristics and underlying mechanisms of existing HCV peer interventions and how these drive effectiveness and impact. This systematic scoping review aimed to identify the activities of peer interventions, their reported outcomes, and mechanisms of change. We systematically searched five databases (Scopus, PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO and Web of Science) for peer-reviewed papers which described HCV peer interventions in OECD countries published between 2012 and 2022, informed and structured by the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews and scoping review reporting guidance. All identified studies were double screened at title and abstract and full text stage. Twenty-nine studies met our inclusion criteria. In 23 studies, peer workers delivered interventions, mostly focused on outcomes for intervention recipients. Peer workers improved HCV care linkage, testing, treatment and SVR12 rates. Peer workers themselves reported increased confidence, job satisfaction, improved mental wellbeing, employability and social integration into communities. Key activities and peer intervention elements were occasionally documented, but more often omitted. None of the included studies explicitly documented or theorised underlying mechanisms, that is, how or why peer interventions work. The lack of details and mechanistic descriptions of peer interventions negatively impact the ability to optimise and enhance peer-led HCV care. This potentially undermines the elimination of HCV at population level.
ORCID iDs
Daly, Sorcha, Reid, Leila, Buchanan, Ryan, McCulloch, Peter, Flowers, Paul
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6239-5616, Frankis, Jamie and Vojt, Gabriele;
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Item type: Article ID code: 95394 Dates: DateEvent1 February 2026Published23 January 2026Published Online29 December 2025AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Public aspects of medicine Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Psychological Sciences and Health > Psychology Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 26 Jan 2026 09:52 Last modified: 06 Mar 2026 11:41 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/95394
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