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Qualitative service evaluation of a multimodal pilot service for early detection of liver disease in high-risk groups: ‘Alright My Liver?’

Qualitative service evaluation of a multimodal pilot service for early detection of liver disease in high-risk groups: ‘Alright My Liver?’
Qualitative service evaluation of a multimodal pilot service for early detection of liver disease in high-risk groups: ‘Alright My Liver?’
Objective: liver disease is a growing cause of premature death in the UK. The National Health Service in England (NHS England) has funded regional early detection programmes through Community Liver Health Check pilots. ‘Alright My Liver?’ is Bristol and Severn’s pilot service offering early detection of liver disease through screening events serving populations at risk, including people with a history of drug or alcohol use, type 2 diabetes and obesity. The service offers point-of-care testing for liver disease and a supported follow-up process.

Methods: semistructured interviews were conducted with 14 service users and six service providers over a 6-month period using diversity sampling. Topic guides encouraged discussion of experiences of the service as well as barriers and facilitators to accessing the service. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, and positive and negative comments pertaining to the service were collated in a ‘table of changes’ to inform optimisation.

Results: three main themes were identified: (1) motivations for engagement, (2) experience of the service and (3) health impacts. Key motivations for engagement were screening as a novel opportunity, a response to immediate health concerns or as reassurance. Service users commented on its convenience and that staff interactions were warm and informative. Some felt that follow-up could be more intensive. Impacts varied depending on perceived risk factors and screening results but generally involved stating a commitment to healthy lifestyle changes, including reducing alcohol use.

Conclusion: targeted screening for liver disease in high-risk groups through this pilot service was deemed an appropriate and accessible intervention, with important optimisations identified.
Adult, Aged, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/diagnosis, Early Diagnosis, England/epidemiology, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Liver Diseases/diagnosis, Male, Mass Screening/methods, Middle Aged, Motivation, Obesity/epidemiology, Pilot Projects, Qualitative Research, Risk Factors, State Medicine
2054-4774
Archer, Ann Jane
055828d6-7309-43ce-8e81-c2d3702648ac
May, Tom
df5e19c6-7c8c-49e7-92d1-8b7b4707ae6d
Bowers, hannah
84a6f986-c18f-4d7b-8955-6502a66db42a
Kesten, Joanna
33eccfe3-3e24-4868-89a4-d38ed6c53a8b
Tilden, Sally
70399a12-6baf-4b19-8829-3798893786e9
Abeysekera, Kushala
7cd46372-9e36-4cb0-816c-9d5694521be8
Gordon, Fiona H.
dc70b554-0efe-4d89-98df-f89adff9eb11
Hickman, Matthew
947802c5-28fe-4362-a583-092f8a043f11
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Archer, Ann Jane
055828d6-7309-43ce-8e81-c2d3702648ac
May, Tom
df5e19c6-7c8c-49e7-92d1-8b7b4707ae6d
Bowers, hannah
84a6f986-c18f-4d7b-8955-6502a66db42a
Kesten, Joanna
33eccfe3-3e24-4868-89a4-d38ed6c53a8b
Tilden, Sally
70399a12-6baf-4b19-8829-3798893786e9
Abeysekera, Kushala
7cd46372-9e36-4cb0-816c-9d5694521be8
Gordon, Fiona H.
dc70b554-0efe-4d89-98df-f89adff9eb11
Hickman, Matthew
947802c5-28fe-4362-a583-092f8a043f11
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

Archer, Ann Jane, May, Tom, Bowers, hannah, Kesten, Joanna, Tilden, Sally, Abeysekera, Kushala, Gordon, Fiona H., Hickman, Matthew and Yardley, Lucy (2024) Qualitative service evaluation of a multimodal pilot service for early detection of liver disease in high-risk groups: ‘Alright My Liver?’. BMJ Open Gastroenterology, 11, [e001560]. (doi:10.1136/bmjgast-2024-001560).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: liver disease is a growing cause of premature death in the UK. The National Health Service in England (NHS England) has funded regional early detection programmes through Community Liver Health Check pilots. ‘Alright My Liver?’ is Bristol and Severn’s pilot service offering early detection of liver disease through screening events serving populations at risk, including people with a history of drug or alcohol use, type 2 diabetes and obesity. The service offers point-of-care testing for liver disease and a supported follow-up process.

Methods: semistructured interviews were conducted with 14 service users and six service providers over a 6-month period using diversity sampling. Topic guides encouraged discussion of experiences of the service as well as barriers and facilitators to accessing the service. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, and positive and negative comments pertaining to the service were collated in a ‘table of changes’ to inform optimisation.

Results: three main themes were identified: (1) motivations for engagement, (2) experience of the service and (3) health impacts. Key motivations for engagement were screening as a novel opportunity, a response to immediate health concerns or as reassurance. Service users commented on its convenience and that staff interactions were warm and informative. Some felt that follow-up could be more intensive. Impacts varied depending on perceived risk factors and screening results but generally involved stating a commitment to healthy lifestyle changes, including reducing alcohol use.

Conclusion: targeted screening for liver disease in high-risk groups through this pilot service was deemed an appropriate and accessible intervention, with important optimisations identified.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 October 2024
Published date: 12 November 2024
Keywords: Adult, Aged, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/diagnosis, Early Diagnosis, England/epidemiology, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Liver Diseases/diagnosis, Male, Mass Screening/methods, Middle Aged, Motivation, Obesity/epidemiology, Pilot Projects, Qualitative Research, Risk Factors, State Medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496842
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496842
ISSN: 2054-4774
PURE UUID: 193733f2-ffd0-4d79-a92a-e62269b69b45
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 08:18
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Ann Jane Archer
Author: Tom May
Author: hannah Bowers
Author: Joanna Kesten
Author: Sally Tilden
Author: Kushala Abeysekera
Author: Fiona H. Gordon
Author: Matthew Hickman
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD

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