Transcript Inservice

INSERVICE
AN INTERACTIVE JOURNEY BY NICK AND JONO
CASE 1: Liver-ing it Up
Joan Walgett is a 43 year old mother of two well known to the practice. She presents today with
mild flu-like symptoms, a sore stomach, some nausea and vomiting, and has been feeling tired.
What could be wrong?
Hepatitis Symptoms
Symptoms last a few weeks and include:
o Flu-like illness
o Loss of appetite
o Nausea and vomiting
o Aches
o Fever
o Jaundice
o Dark urine
CASE 1: Liver-ing it Up
What are some important considerations in a history from this patient?
Case 1: Liver-ing it Up
Important points to cover in history:
o Risk factors/spread
o Surrounding people at risk
o Symptoms – only 1/3 experience symptoms
Transmission of Hepatitis
Contaminated personal
items
Piercings and tatoos
Mother to Child
Blood Transfusions
Sex
IVDU
Necessary Conversations
How do you think you should tell the patient they have hepatitis B?
How to Break Bad News
SPIKES:
o Setting
o Perception
o Invitation
o Knowledge transfer
o Empathy
o Summarise and Strategies
Case 1: Liver-ing it Up
Joan wants to know more about her illness and the risks associated with it, she has two young
kids and is worried for their safety.
What does she need to know?
Patient Education
o Mode of transmission
o Surfaces contaminated with body fluids need to be cleaned and disinfected
o Don’t share personal items like razors
o Don’t donate blood or body parts
o Safe sex
o You can have unprotected sex with a hep B positive person if adequately immunised (positive serology
result)
o Importance of treating hepatitis B positive mothers before birth
o Notify medical/dental workers of condition
How do we catch it?
77,000 NSW residents are estimated to have hepatitis B
o Indigenous Health Check – (Medicare item 715)
o Contact Tracing
o Initial symptomatic presentation
Contact Tracing
Identification – sexual contact in the last 6 months, newborn children, people in close contact
Reportable – tell public health as it is a reportable disease
• Only confirmed cases with laboratory evidence must be reported
• Detection of HBsAg in a patient shown to be previously negative
• OR detection of HBsAg or IgM to HBcAg unless prior hepatitis B infection
• OR detection of hepatits B virus by nucleic acid testing and IgM to HBcAg
• N.B – transient HBsAg positivity can occur after hepatitis B vaccine, but is unlikely to persist after 14 days
* The treating doctor is responsible for following this up!
Prevention
NSW Hep B Strategy 2014-20:
o Hepatitis B childhood vaccine coverage (95%)
o All pregnant women are screened for hepatitis B
o All babies with infected mothers are given immunoglobulins
o Reduce sharing of injecting equipment
o Increase antiviral treatment
Consequences of Hepatitis B
What do you think the consequences of hepatitis B are?
Consequences of Chronic Hep B
o Cirrhosis
o Hepatocellular Carcinoma
o Decreased QoL due to symptoms
Monitoring and Management
o Local Health Districts
o Build support systems
o Targeted education
o Increased investigations for screening of liver cancer
o Government
o Supporting GPs and Nurse Practitioners in Hep B management and treatment through the Highly Specialized
Drug Program
oEducate about diet, exercise, and alcohol
o Limit alcohol
o Regular exercise
o Dietary restrictions
THANKS FOR LISTENING!!
References
o Baile, Walter F., et al. "SPIKES—a six-step protocol for delivering bad news: application to the patient
with cancer." The oncologist 5.4 (2000): 302-311.
o Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet (2008) Summary of hepatitis A/B among Indigenous
Australians. Retrieved [4/11/2015] from http://www.healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/infectiousconditions/hepatitis/reviews/our-review-ab
o Hepatitis B Communicable Disease Factsheet, NSW Health (2013) Communicable Diseases
Department, http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/factsheets/Factsheets/hep-b.pdf , accessed
6/11/2015
o NSW Hepatitis B Strategy 2014-2020, NSW Ministry of Health (2014)
http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/hepatitis/Publications/HepatitisBStrategy.pdf , Retrieved [4/11/2015]
o Hepatitis B Communicable Disease Protocol, NSW Health (2015) Communicable Diseases
Department http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/controlguideline/Documents/hepatitisB.PDF ,
accessed 7/11/2015