TLC project Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation Sat, 13 Jan 2024 00:12:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-Favicon-32x32.jpg TLC project Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation 32 32 Interview: Peer Health Mentors Work to Improve Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/interview-peer-health-mentors-work-to-improve-connection-to-hepatitis-c-virus-treatment-after-release-from-provincial-prisons-in-bc/ Tue, 15 Mar 2022 20:10:44 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/interview-peer-health-mentors-work-to-improve-connection-to-hepatitis-c-virus-treatment-after-release-from-provincial-prisons-in-bc/ In a follow-up to her last guest blog post introducing Test, Link, Call Project (TLC), Dr Sofia Bartlett returns to share an interview she recently had with Peer Health Mentors Pam, Cheri, and Tammy at Unlocking the Gates Society (UTG).

The post Interview: Peer Health Mentors Work to Improve Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC appeared first on Pacific Public Health Foundation.

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Guest blog post by:
Sofia Bartlett PhD
Senior Scientist for Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections (STIBBI) with Clinical Prevention Services at the BC Centre for Disease Control
Pam Young
Program Manager & Peer Health Mentor, Unlocking the Gates Services Society
Cheri McBride
Peer Health Mentor, Unlocking the Gates Services Society
Tammy Milkovich
Peer Health Mentor, Unlocking the Gates Services Society


Following up from her last guest post introducing the TestLinkCall (TLC) Project, Sofia sat down with Pam, Cheri, and Tammy from Unlocking the Gates Services Society (UTG) for an interview to discuss their work and TLC Project. UTG is a Peer-led and run not-for-profit organization that supports people when they are released from prison or jail in British Columbia (BC) to help them start their life again back in in the community. TLC Project is a pilot to link people living with hepatitis C (‘hep C’) infection with Peer Support through UTG and providing them with a cell phone after release from prison.

Q Sofia: Can you tell me how you describe your job with UTG, and how does UTG work?

Cheri: I’m a Peer Health Mentor with Unlocking the Gates; we walk alongside people when they are leaving corrections, help guide them on accessing services, and whatever other things they need assistance with. Having people with lived experience of incarceration involved in this period of transition when someone is leaving corrections makes a huge difference to how clients react to services that are offered!

Peer Health Mentors

Q Sofia: What is the Test Link Call (TLC) Project and how are you involved in it?

Tammy: We identify clients coming out of corrections who have hep C and who haven’t been linked to care or treatment yet—so we talk about hep C, hep B, HIV, we check with all our clients about that. If they have hep C infection, we find out if they did treatment yet, we tell them about the new treatments and how easy they are, I tell them about my previous clients who have done hep C treatment successfully, and we tell them about TestLinkCall Project. What that involves is we will link them to care with a treatment provider, give them a cell phone, and walk with them through treatment.

Pam: I hear things about the old hep C treatment still all the time from clients, the old interferon treatment hasn’t gone from peoples’ minds. The old treatment overwhelmed people for a long time. I’ve had clients do the new treatment and all they had was a headache. When I hear people talk about the old treatment, I address all their fears and misconceptions, so a lot of the time what we’re doing is education.

Q Sofia: How do you think TLC Project has helped UTG clients so far?

Pam: Our clients can do video calls with their hep C care providers now; that’s been a huge help for them. It’s so convenient to do their hep C treatment all by phone because a lot of them can’t get to appointments! But without a phone, telehealth, or video calls are impossible.

Cheri: The TestLinkCall program has been great because the Peer Health Mentors can check in with clients every few weeks by calling their cell phone, we just say “How you doing? How’s the treatment going? Hope you’re doing great!” It means a lot to them.

Tammy: Quite often, we are the only ones in our clients’ corner. We are often their only social connection—and giving them a phone actually helps a lot for them to feel like we are there for them.

Pam: I think it’s also been great that our clients can use social media and use video chat now to connect with family. There’s also these apps on the phones, before we give them to the clients, like the LifeGuard app, which is for safer substance use and can help alert first responders in the event of accidental overdose. I don’t know for sure that my clients who have received a phone are using the LifeGuard app, but at least we tell them about it and how to use it, and it’s on the phones.

Cheri: I know for sure one of my clients used the LifeGuard app on their phone that we gave them!

Tammy: Also, the phones are so good for the clients to be able to connect to other services, like trying to get into a drug detox facility.

Example of UTG client accessing TLC Project services

Q Sofia: How do you think TLC Project can contribute to overall public health and hep C elimination in the overall population?

Cheri: Honestly I never heard of the overall goal for hep C elimination until today! But I’ll tell you, I don’t see hep C elimination being possible without things like TestLinkCall Project, or having other ways to connect people to care. We really need things like TestLinkCall Project where Peers who are connected with people at risk of hep C, like people in the prison system, have got support and resources to help link these clients to care. Or else hep C elimination is not going to work!

Pam: The prison population has such a high number of people living with hep C infection, it’s such a good place to start to get people connected to care, as part of these overall hep C elimination goals. But you know there’s so many other places we could also go to! Like recovery houses or homeless shelters, so I think this project could be scaled up or expanded even more!

Cheri: And I think if Peers could collect samples for hep C testing or do point of care tests, this would reach a lot of people and would be very acceptable for our clients. And this would work really well with TestLinkCall Project and the process we already established for linkage to care!

Tammy: Yes, if Peers could do testing or collect samples, clients would feel so much safer, and everything will move by so much quicker because we would be able to do everything on the spot at the shelter or wherever else we find them.


To learn more about Test, Link, Call (TLC) Project, read Dr Bartlett’s guest blog post Test, Link, Call (TLC) Project: Improving Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC.


The post Interview: Peer Health Mentors Work to Improve Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC appeared first on Pacific Public Health Foundation.

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Newsletter #33: February 2022 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/newsletter-33-february-2022/ Fri, 18 Feb 2022 16:58:08 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/newsletter-33-february-2022/ Test, Link, Call (TLC) Project: Improving Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC, Reflections: COVID-19, Looking Back and Ahead, Together, and we'd love your help with a thing! Check out our February issue for these stories, and more!

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The post Newsletter #33: February 2022 appeared first on Pacific Public Health Foundation.

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Test, Link, Call (TLC) Project: Improving Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/test-link-call-tlc-project-improving-connection-to-hepatitis-c-virus-treatment-after-release-from-provincial-prisons-in-bc/ Wed, 16 Feb 2022 22:32:14 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/test-link-call-tlc-project-improving-connection-to-hepatitis-c-virus-treatment-after-release-from-provincial-prisons-in-bc/ With funding and support from the BCCDC Foundation for Public Health, the Test, Link, Call Project (TLC) was formed. This project aims to increase the proportion of people affected by HCV infection who connect to a community HCV treatment provider after release from BC Provincial Correctional Centres.

The post Test, Link, Call (TLC) Project: Improving Connection to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment After Release from Provincial Prisons in BC appeared first on Pacific Public Health Foundation.

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Guest post by:
Sofia Bartlett PhD
Senior Scientist for Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections (STIBBI) with Clinical Prevention Services at the BC Centre for Disease Control

In Canada, for people who have been sentenced to a period of custody of less than two years, this sentence is served in a provincial or territorial correctional centre. People who are also being held on remand awaiting sentencing or trial, or people who are held on immigration detention, are also held in provincial correctional centres. This results in very short median lengths of stay for people who are incarcerated in the BC provincial correctional system; people who are sentenced spend a median of 65 days, and people on remand spend a median of 30 days in custody in BC Provincial Correctional Centres.

While people in prison are often considered to be a ‘captive audience,’ the reality is that there is considerable and frequent movement in and out of BC Provincial Correctional Centres. These frequent movements result in gaps in continuity of care for people who experience incarceration who are living with a chronic health condition.

As a result of this, the not-for-profit organization Unlocking the Gates Services Society (UTG) was founded, to help mentor and support people who are being released from provincial custody and link them to care back in the community. But something that UTG and their clients persistently struggle with is the ‘digital divide.’ This is a term that has been coined to describe the growing gap between members of society, such as people experiencing poverty or homelessness, who do not have access to computers or smart phones or lack internet access and digital connectivity.

The digital divide has created additional challenges since the COVID-19 pandemic began, as more organizations have moved to delivering their services virtually or remotely in order to protect staff and clients. For many people leaving provincial prisons, they don’t have a cell phone or any financial resources to pay for calling or texting credits, which leaves healthcare providers unable to contact them to organize appointments or provide care. This also creates additional challenges for the healthcare providers working within BC Provincial Correctional Centres, as they are unable to make referrals to services after release or provide transitional care plans to their clients.

Dr Sofia Bartlett showcasing TLC phone and participant certificate

Sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBIs) like hepatitis C virus (HCV) are much more prevalent among people who are in prison, compared to the overall population in Canada. Accordingly, the Blueprint to inform hepatitis C elimination efforts in Canada produced by the Canadian Network for Hepatitis C (CanHepC), identifies people who have experienced incarceration as a priority population to link to HCV testing and treatment. And as BC Mental Health and Substance Use Services (BCMHSUS) now provide healthcare in all 10 BC Provincial Correctional Centres, and HCV testing and diagnosis in these centres has improved considerably in the last four years, there was a greater need to find ways to make the connection to HCV care after release from prison more efficient and effective.

So, with funding and support from the BCCDC Foundation for Public Health, a team from BCCDC, BCMHSUS, BC Hepatitis Network and UTG came together to create and launch the Test, Link, Call Project (TLC). This Quality Improvement project aims to increase the proportion of people affected by HCV infection who connect to a community HCV treatment provider after release from BC Provincial Correctional Centres.

Example conversation with TLC peer mentor

This is achieved by creating a Transitional Care Plan (TCP) for each participant before release, then providing them with a cell phone that has an unlimited calling and text plan for six months on it, on the day they are released from custody.

Experienced Peer Support Workers from BC Hepatitis Network provide HCV patient navigation training to UTG Peer Mentors who have lived experience of incarceration. This allows the UTG Peer Mentors to meet participants on the day they are released from custody, give them their new phone and help them set it up, then provide on-going support with HCV medication and appointment reminders, as well as assistance with transportation and other needs.

By providing TCPs, cell phones, and peer support and mentoring to people as they are released from corrections, we aim to increase linkage to care and HCV treatment uptake among this priority population, as well as aid in successful re-integration back to the community.


Read an interview with Peer Mentors here.


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