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The Essentials of Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention A Training Series for Coordinators and Case Managers

The Essentials of Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention A Training Series for Coordinators and Case Managers. Lisa Jacques-Carroll, MSW NCIRD, CDC. Session 2: Case Management. Learning Objectives. Describe key components of case management in a perinatal hepatitis B prevention program

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The Essentials of Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention A Training Series for Coordinators and Case Managers

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  1. The Essentials of Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention A Training Series for Coordinators and Case Managers

  2. Lisa Jacques-Carroll, MSW NCIRD, CDC Session 2: Case Management

  3. Learning Objectives • Describe key components of case management in a perinatal hepatitis B prevention program • steps in case management for infants born to HBsAg-positive women • data tracking and management systems to help with case management

  4. Benefits of Case Management • Case managed infants are more likely to receive post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) at birth • Also more likely to complete their vaccine series on time

  5. Case Management in Perinatal Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) Prevention: State Examples Sources: Brian Wheeler, Alabama Dept of Public Health, 2004; MMWR 1996;45:584–7

  6. Completion of Follow-up for IdentifiedInfants of HBsAg+ Mothers, 1993-2005 HBIG/vaccine at birth 94% 3 doses by 6-8 months 71% 53% Postvaccination testing Source: NCIRD program data, CDC

  7. ACIP Recommended Components of Case Management Programs • Identify and track HBsAg-positive pregnant women • Notify delivery hospitals where HBsAg-positive pregnant women plan to give birth • Ensure hospitals appropriately manage infants born to HBsAg-positive and HBsAg-unknown status women • Ensure hospitals have appropriate standing orders and written policies Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Sources: ACIP statement, MMWR 2005 (RR-16), and Guide to Life

  8. Recommended Components of Case Management Programs – con’t • Ensure completion of infant’s hepatitis B vaccine series • Ensure post-vaccination testing of infant • Ensure pre-vaccination testing and vaccination of household and sex contacts of women • Monitor and evaluate the case management program Source: ACIP statement, MMWR 2005 (RR-16), and Guide to Life

  9. Timing of Identification • The management of an HBsAg-positive pregnant woman varies depending upon when she is identified: • prenatally • at delivery • postnatally

  10. Management of Infant at Birth* • Mother isHBsAg positive • hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of birth • HBIG within 12 hours of birth • Mother isHBsAg status unknown • hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of birth • test mother for HBsAg ASAP • if mother is HBsAg-positive  give HBIG to infant ASAP but no later than 7 days after birth *For infants <2000 g, follow ACIP guidelines

  11. Prenatal Case Initiation • Contact prenatal care provider to confirm: • HBsAg test results • date of test • expected date of delivery • expected delivery hospital • whether woman has been evaluated for her HBV infection • Notify the delivery hospital

  12. Prenatal Case Initiation - cont’d • Contact the woman to provide education and information • Identify sex partners and household contacts for testing, vaccination, and follow-up

  13. Education of Mother Discuss with HBsAg+ pregnant woman: • What test results mean • Typical course of HBV infection • Seriousness of infection in newborns • How infant will be managed • Perinatal concerns (e.g., breastfeeding is safe)

  14. Education of Mother - cont’d • How she can take care of herself • Importance of evaluation for HBV infection • Referral to physician for evaluation • How to prevent transmission to others • Importance of identifying/vaccinating sex partners and household contacts

  15. Tips for working with the Mother • Use mother’s first language • Use materials with visual aids/low reading level (if appropriate) • Provide materials for review at home • Reinforce messages with follow-up letters • immediately after first interview • just before due date • before each vaccination is due • before post-vaccination testing

  16. Prior to Delivery • Remind woman and delivery hospital of importance of postexposure prophylaxis for infant at birth • consider giving woman card to take to hospital with instructions on care of infant • consider sending hospitals monthly list of HBsAg-positive women expected to deliver

  17. After Expected Date of Delivery • Contact hospital to determine: • date of delivery • date/time of hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG • updated contact information for mother

  18. HBsAg+ Woman Identified at Delivery • Contact mother ASAP to provide information on hepatitis B virus • Ensure receipt of hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG • Proceed with case management of infant • Identify and manage sex partners and household contacts

  19. After Birth to HBsAg+ Woman • Remind pediatrician and parentsabout • when to administer each dose of hepatitis B • when to perform post-vaccination testing (at 9-18 months of age, after 3 doses of vaccine) • Verify dates hepatitis B vaccine was given • Review post-vaccination test results with pediatrician

  20. Infant Post-Vaccination Test Results • If HBsAg-negative & anti-HBs >10 mIU/mL  infant is protected • If HBsAg-negative & anti-HBs <10 mIU/mL  revaccinate with 3-dose hep B series  retest 1–2 months after final dose • If HBsAg-positive  refer infant for medical evaluation/ management of chronic HBV  report perinatal infection to CDC via NNDSS (National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System)

  21. Reminder and Recall Systems • Notify before (reminder) and after (recall) vaccines and tests are due • Use for parents, pediatricians, and case workers • How? • postcards filled out by parent to be mailed by provider or health department • computer-generated letters • computer-generated phone calls • prompts for case workers follow up

  22. Ideal Data Tracking & Management • Helps manage cases and evaluate success • Allows indexing by mother/infant names • Generates reminders for case managers • Generates reminders for patients and providers • Generates reports at regional/program level • Allows timely entry of program data

  23. Benefits of Data Integration • Some programs’ perinatal hepatitis B data are integrated into other systems: • Immunization Information System (IIS) • infant hepatitis B vaccinations in this system • communicable disease reporting system • HBsAg-positive women reported to this system

  24. Name Contact info Emergency contact Insurance status Prenatal care provider Liver disease specialist Date of first appointment with specialist Date of birth Country of birth Race/ethnicity Primary language Due date No. of previous deliveries Complete HBV test results and dates of specimens -HBsAg -HBeAg (encouraged) -HBV DNA (encouraged) Core Data Elements: Mother

  25. Name Date and time of birth Birth weight Gestational age Delivery hospital Pediatrician HBIG administration date, time, brand, dosage Birth dose of vaccine date, time, brand, dosage Subsequent doses date, brand, dosage Post-vaccination test HBsAg status Anti-HBs level date Reasons for loss to follow-up (if applicable) Core Data Elements: Infant

  26. Core Data Elements: Contacts • Name • Contact info • Pre-vaccination test results, date • Hepatitis B vaccine doses • Post-vaccination test results (sexual contacts)

  27. Program Activities to Support Case Management • Train state and local case workers • in-service trainings • written perinatal hepatitis B prevention protocol • Educate providers and hospitals • delivery hospital staff • OB/GYNs and other prenatal care staff • pediatricians and family practitioners

  28. Program Activities - cont’d • Having written policies and procedures in place • prenatal care settings • delivery hospitals • pediatric care settings • Ensuring hospitals have standing orders • screen delivering women • prophylaxis to infants born to HBsAg-positive and unknown status mothers • universal birth dose

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