The majority of included sources employed convenience sampling, and so sampled detainees may not have been representative of the broader detainee population. Reinforcing this point, sources reporting data from random samples of general population detainees had significantly lower anti-HCV prevalence than sources with convenience samples. We used all identified data sources to estimate the summary prevalence of anti-HCV; however, older
studies this website reported higher anti-HCV prevalence than more recent studies. As a result, our summary prevalence estimates may overestimate the true anti-HCV burden. In evaluating our estimates, it is also important to note that very few data sources were located for some regions known to have high prevalence of anti-HCV among people who inject drugs, such as East
and Southeast Asia.[5] Despite a broad-based search strategy, no data were located for several countries with large incarcerated populations, including Russia, which has the world’s second largest prisoner population, and China, which, as noted above, operates a large network of extrajudicial detention centers for people who use drugs in addition to correctional facilities operating under the criminal GS-1101 in vivo justice system. No data could be located for countries of the Caribbean and the Pacific Islands. Even in well-represented regions, such as Western Europe and North America, Arachidonate 15-lipoxygenase data frequently related to single
institutions or institutions within a defined geographical area. Systematic data collection at the country or jurisdictional level is urgently required to allow for accurate appraisal of the scale of this issue, and to inform policy and clinical responses. The burden of HCV in detained populations, particularly in areas where IDU is highly prevalent among detainees, is a major public health concern. Despite this, epidemiologic data on the extent of HCV infection in detained populations is lacking in many countries. The global response to HCV in closed settings has been limited, with few countries implementing the necessary preventive interventions or providing treatment for HCV-infected detainees. Greater attention towards HCV prevention, diagnosis, and effective delivery of treatment to detained populations is urgently required. We thank the following individuals and organizations for assistance in completing this review: Mary Kumvaj, National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, for assistance with developing search strings and locating literature; Paul Nelson, National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, for methodological advice; Christine Reavis, student intern, for assisting with the literature search; and Annette Verster, HIV/AIDS Department, World Health Organization, for funding support and assisting with identification of gray literature.