Roundup Webinar | Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe

To celebrate the core publications for the C-EHRN Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe, we invite you to join the roundup webinar on the 7th of March, 1:00 PM (CET)!

 
The event will bring together four recently published volumes of the 2023 Data Report:
 
During the interactive webinar, the primary authors of each publication will join  Rafaela Rigoni, C-EHRN’s Head of Research, to debate positive developments and the main advocacy asks arising from the reports’ conclusions. We’ll invite participants to interact via a Q&A session.
 
Moderator:
Rafaela Rigoni (C-EHRN)
 
Speakers:
Iga Jeziorska (C-EHRN) –  Essential Harm Reduction Services
Tuukka Tammi (THL) –  Eliminating Hepatitis C in Europe
Daan van der Gouwe (Trimbos) – New Drug Trends
Guy Jones (TEDI) – Drug Checking Observations and European Drug Checking Trends via TEDI

To join the webinar, register by the 6th of March on this link!

 

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

Watch the short film introducing CORE – COmmunity REsponse to End Inequalities!

Introducing CORE – COmmunity REsponse to End Inequalities!
 
Uniting the efforts of 24 partners from 16 countries, CORE puts community responses in the centre, empowering them to scale up the services and lead HIV, HCV, and TB responses. In this introductory film, CORE partners talk about the situation and challenges with community response and their expectations for the 3 years of the project.
 
 

Community-Led Approaches to HCV Testing, Treatment and Care

Read EuroNPUD’s technical briefing Community-Led Approaches to HCV Testing, Treatment and Care!

“The key argument for community-led approaches to hepatitis (HCV) testing, treatment and care is that they are highly effective in increasing HCV testing and treatment uptake and retention rates among people who use drugs due to their unique advantage in providing privileged access. This access is a crucial pathway, allowing for multiple points of entry essential for reaching both the treatment and non-treatment populations.

As highlighted in the case studies included in this Technical Briefing, the impact of peer workers and drug user activists on the expansion of HCV testing, treatment and care is substantial. Their dedication aligns seamlessly with the strategic objective of saturating peer networks with essential resources and knowledge, thereby facilitating broad access to comprehensive HCV testing, treatment and care. This briefing includes two case studies that spotlight successful community-led approaches in Portugal and Norway, offering valuable insights into the effectiveness of integrating peer-led initiatives into HCV healthcare strategies.” (p. 3.)

Fill in the European Region Survey to Explore the Experiences of Living with Hepatitis B and/or Hepatitis C

Have you experienced stigma or discrimination around hepatitis B or C? Make your voice heard by taking part in the world’s first survey about it! The survey is a pilot and is currently open for people from Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Germany, Romania and Spain. It can be filled in the following languages:

 

The World Hepatitis Alliance (WHA), in collaboration with the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), is working to understand the experience of stigma and discrimination* of people living with hepatitis B and C in the European region**. This survey is the first survey of stigma and discrimination related to hepatitis to be conducted in the region. We hope the information collected through this survey will help policy makers formulate informed policies and strategies to reduce stigma and discrimination among people living with hepatitis and improve the quality of life for people with hepatitis. The results of the survey will also enable the monitoring of trends over time, help identify targeted interventions to tackle stigma and discrimination, and explore the complex dynamics related to viral hepatitis stigma.

If you are 18 years of age or older and living with hepatitis B and/or hepatitis C, or have ever had hepatitis C, then you can help out by answering this survey. The survey should take around 10 minutes to complete. Please note that the survey is anonymous, confidential, and no information will be collected that allows for the identification of participants. All data collected as part of the survey will be handled in strict accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) guidelines.
We are aware that some of the questions are sensitive. Please do not answer any question that you feel uncomfortable with. If you would like further support, please click the link at the end of the survey to find a list of local organisations working with people who have hepatitis B and hepatitis C that you can contact.

*Please check the WHA’s report on stigma and discrimination if you want to learn more about it.
**Countries within the European Region: Albania, Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Uzbekistan, and Vatican City.

Digital Skills Training Course for Organisations Working in HIV & Viral Hepatitis

As part of the BOOST project, a Digital Skills Training for harm reduction organisations working in the area of HIV and viral hepatitis will be held between February and March. The course aims to build the capacity of community-based & community-led harm reduction organisations to use digital tools in the area of HIV and viral hepatitis services.

Find the course sessions, dates, and registration link for each session below:

Can’t attend all the sessions? Please note that joining only one of the sessions is also possible! You can register for each session you’re interested in separately through the respective link.

Collaborative Steps: Crafting a Joint European Advocacy Strategy for Improved HIV, HCV and TB Services for People Who Use Drugs

On 30 and 31 January 2024, partners of Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network and the BOOST Project met in Amsterdam to discuss the development of a European advocacy strategy to ensure access to comprehensive HIV, HCV and TB services for people who use drugs in Europe.

The development of a Joint European Advocacy Strategy is unique as it will be supported and implemented by 4 European Networks, including Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network (C-EHRN), the Eurasian Harm Reduction Association (EHRA), the European Network of People Who Use Drugs (EuroNPUD) and Drug Policy Network South East Europe (DPNSEE) and is based on a broad European consultation of nearly 100 experts and members of the different networks.

4-5 Advocacy Priorities and related Advocacy Objectives are identified during the Amsterdam meeting, covering the forthcoming 5 years (2024-2028). The final Strategy is expected to be launched and published in March 2024 and will be implemented with the support of a broader network of European harm reduction and drug policy organisations.

The Amsterdam meeting is part of a greater trajectory of the advocacy activities in the multi-annual BOOST Project. The results will feed into follow-up activities, including the organisation of Policy Webinars, a European Policy Dialogue Meeting during the European Harm Reduction Conference 2024 and the preparation of a series of Policy Papers.

In February, the networks will launch a call for local harm reduction services to support the development and implementation of Local Advocacy Plans in 6 countries/cities.

 

The Amsterdam meeting was co-organised by C-EHRN (coordinator of the BOOST Project) and EHRA, in close cooperation with EuroNPUD and DPNSEE.

Eliminating Hepatitis C in Europe: Report on Policy Implementation for People Who Inject Drugs

We are excited to launch Eliminating Hepatitis C in Europe: Report on Policy Implementation for People Who Inject Drugs! The publication is part of C-EHRN’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction In Europe 2023 Data Report and focuses on the availability of and access to interventions that constitute the HCV continuum of care specific for people who inject drugs.

The report analyzes data from 35 European cities, provided by civil society organisations designated as focal points within the C-EHRN network. It assesses the impact of national strategies on HCV testing and treatment accessibility for people who inject drugs, examines the continuum of care across countries and cities, explores changes in the continuum of services over time, and highlights the role of harm reduction services in this context.

We asked Tuukka Tammi, programme director at the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare and the primary author about the findings and how harm reduction organisations can use the report to advocate for their work at a city level. Download the report and read the interview below!

How do you see the role of harm reduction organisations in hepatitis C care?

People who inject drugs are the main target group, if we use these words, for hepatitis C -related work. I don’t think that in any country only the specialized infectious experts could do enough in contacting, finding, treating them and keeping them in the treatment system.

Harm reduction services, services for the unhoused and all these low-threshold services are the only places where many of the people who use drugs are met, not anywhere else. This is also the case in Helsinki, where I come from. Even if we have quite a good general health care, many of the people who are hepatitis C positive don’t ever go there for one reason or the other.  So I think harm reduction organisations are necessary partners for the healthcare system and infectious disease experts.

How would you describe the connection between national guidelines and actual practice?

The hepatitis C testing & treatment guidelines are part of the questionnaire and the idea is to see the progress on the formal side of things. To be successful in hepatitis C work with people who use drugs, the country or the city needs to have formal guidelines so that these people are treated in a uniform way in different clinics. But we know that formal guidelines or instructions do not yet mean that the same happens in practice. So we also asked if they see contradictions or limited impact in practice.

Respondents reported many kinds of real-life impacts of these guidelines for testing and treatment and other services for people who use drugs. Mostly they say that these have a positive impact. They make hepatitis C-related work better in many ways, meaning people have better access to treatment and testing, and other positive impacts. Some mentioned that civil society organisations have better access to work with hepatitis C or are more involved because of the guidelines if these have an emphasis that low threshold services like harm reduction services should be included in the work.

Respondents from three cities from Eastern Europe believe that the guidelines had a negative impact. This mainly has to do, I think, with stressing in the guidelines that all hepatitis C-positive people need to be treated in specialized healthcare. We know it would be important to include harm reduction services in this work because people who inject drugs are often marginalized, often unhoused, and do not usually go to these specialised public healthcare settings.

One repeated missing thing was that undocumented migrants are not included in the guidelines. In practice, in many cities, there is no access to any testing or treatment services for them.

 

You made a comparison among 25 cities that have taken part in the monitoring process in the past years to see if there are changes in the big picture in addressing hepatitis C. Are there any changes you would highlight?

At the very general level, the interpretation from the past 4 years was that there is some positive development and also that this positive trajectory has been reestablished after the pandemic when the situation in many places got worse because of restricted opening hours and moving from face-to-face clinical work to some other forms of work.

Also on a very general level, it can be said that there is polarisation of European cities. In many cities, it seems that they are proceeding quite well and might even reach the global elimination goal for 2030, to eliminate hepatitis C totally or almost totally. Then there are cities where the progress is very slow and there’s a lack of many things like economic and political support for this work or advocacy, and insufficient infrastructure for testing and treatment in general. Some cities still have old-fashioned working methods, even the interferon treatment, which is not very effective and not very nice for the patient, but luckily this is quite rare.

Would you highlight one of the graphs from the report and explain why you find it relevant?

Number 15. I think this is one of the main graphs from the viewpoint of harm reduction-related work, what kind of limitations are there for harm reduction organisations in addressing hepatitis C? This has been a more or less similar graph for many years. We see that there are 2 main obstacles: lack of funding and also lack of integration with the healthcare system. That’s a resource problem and a structural problem, not having links and connections.

10 cities mentioned a lack of staff doing testing and treatment, extra work in addition to other work they do. Then maybe the lack of recognition is related to the lack of integration with the healthcare system. Not everywhere are the harm reduction organisations regarded as relevant or qualified partners for doing this work. On the same level is a lack of political support,  and there is a  general weakness of local harm reduction services, they don’t have capacities to do this work.  A lack of data for planning the work was also mentioned.

I think if we turn this into an advocacy or planning language, these are also the same factors that would need to be paid attention to.

 

Are there any best practices that can serve as an inspiration for the better integration of harm reduction services with the healthcare system that you would mention?

There surely are good practices and good examples from many cities, how they are very well integrated, such as in Amsterdam, or in Barcelona where they also have an observatory for monitoring stigma in services.

The lack of funding and lack of political support is a more tricky one. It varies a lot, how the funding works in different cities. We know that for instance, in many Eastern European countries, there’s a general lack of or no funding for harm reduction services more generally, not only related to hepatitis C  work.

 

How do you think organisations can use the report?

One way to use it is to compare their situation with the others. If it’s worse than in other cities, making some noise about it in their cities and countries would be useful. Comparing different situations can also be an effective way to talk to policymakers. Not naming and shaming, but showing that harm reduction organisations can be very effective partners for the healthcare system in reaching people with hepatitis C and providing testing and treatment to them because we know that the prevalence of hepatitis C is most common among people who inject drugs and these people are not usually very well reached by the public healthcare system.  So showing that this is possible, also in old fashioned systems where they still doubt that harm reduction organisations would be able to do this, showing from the example of other places that it’s working fine.

This report is hopefully useful for peer learning for some people. The more open and qualitative narratives in the report tell how things work in practice in different cities, which could be a source of inspiration for others. They could see what is happening in other cities and contact their colleagues from those cities to ask them for more detailed information: how does it work and how did they succeed in getting it done in the first place.

 

 

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

Open Call for Trainers – Workshop Series for Community-led Communicable Diseases Services

We are excited to announce an open call for trainers for Project CORE‘s Workshop Series!

 

Project CORE – “Community Response to End Inequalities” focuses on reducing inequalities in HIV, TB, and viral hepatitis response by promoting, strengthening, and integrating community responses that have proven key in reaching vulnerable communities. We are looking for trainers to lead workshops within Work Package 4, which aims to strengthen the capacity of Community Health Workers and peers to conduct community-led interventions for those experiencing intersectional vulnerabilities to scale up testing services. The workshop series will be organised by Deutsche Aidshilfe in cooperation with Africa Advocacy FoundationEuropean Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance and C-EHRN in an online format from March 2024 until September 2024.
 
The workshops will focus on the following key topics:
1. Key Populations in HIV/HCV prevention and care
2. Culturally competent services
3. Legal and Policy Landscape
4. Overcoming Barriers
5. Sustainability of services
6. Mental health
 
Trainers are expected to:
  • Deliver a detailed, experience-based presentation.
  • Facilitate discussions where peers and community health workers can exchange experiences and best practices.
  • Establish feedback mechanisms for participant input.
  • Encourage an inclusive and respectful environment for open dialogue.
  • Ensure workshops stay on schedule and cover all relevant agenda items.
  • Synthesize the key points and outcomes of the meeting for future reference and reporting.

Responsibilities:

  • Developing workshop content based on the specified theme.
  • Conducting interactive and engaging online workshops.
  • Facilitating discussions, activities, and exercises.
  • Providing constructive feedback and support to participants.
 
The ideal trainer should possess the following qualifications and expertise:
  • Strong knowledge of HIV/HCV/TB prevention strategies, particularly in diversity and intersectionality.
  • Experience in moderating meetings and facilitating discussions on sensitive topics.
  • Excellent communication and interpersonal skills.
  • Sensitivity to cultural, social, and gender-related issues, and a commitment to ensuring inclusive participation.
  • Strong organisational skills and effective time management.
  • Proficiency in spoken English.
 
Application process:

For detailed information, read the Terms of Reference!
To apply, please fill in this online form.
You can apply as a trainer for more than one topic.

Looking forward to receiving your applications!

ACHIEVE Call to Action for the new EU legislature 2024-2029

“Viral hepatitis B and C are two deadly viruses whose burden is greater than HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis combined.

According to the WHO Global Strategy from 2016, which builds on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), viral hepatitis B and C can be eliminated by 2030. An effective vaccine exists for hepatitis B, and affordable, easy-to-administer, effective treatments are available for both hepatitis B and C. For hepatitis C, the cure rate is almost 98% and, in the absence of a vaccine, treatment in addition to the harm reduction measures serves also as prevention for virus transmission. Hepatitis B vaccination also prevents co-infection hepatotropic viruses, such as hepatitis D, which puts patients at risk.

However, the EU as a whole is not on track for elimination, leading to significant inequalities across Europe. This is nothing short of a tragedy for those infected, those at risk of becoming infected, their families, Europe’s health and social systems, and the economy. This tragedy can and must be prevented.

Read the ACHIEVE Call to Action for the new EU legislature 2024-2029 to find out more about the key obstacles to viral hepatitis B and C elimination, the EU mechanisms that exist and can help, and which actions the different actors (Member States, Stakeholders, European Commission and European Parliament) can take to eliminate viral hepatitis B and C in the EU/EEA.”

 

(Text originally published on ACHIEVE’s website)

Expert & Member Meeting 2023

In December, Budapest gave place to C-EHRN’s Expert & Member Meeting, with more than 130 professionals gathering to discuss the key activities of the network!

To find out more about the event and C-EHRN’s key activities, watch the inspiring video by the Rights Reporter Foundation, and look at the summary of the event below.

On Monday the 4th, our focal points discussed the civil society monitoring of harm reduction in Europe process, ways to use the C-EHRN Monitoring data for advocacy purposes and getting familiar with a new data collection and visualisation tool for the C-EHRN monitoring activities. In the meantime, the partners of the Drug-Prep Project had insightful discussions on foresight research and other project activities.

 

A press conference also took place, introducing drug consumption rooms, drug checking in Europe and the example of Portugal’s health-based drug policy approach, sharing the message that “not only the richest countries in the world can implement efficient drug policies based on decriminalisation” (Marta Pinto, University of Porto). As a result, the conference gained coverage in RTL, one of Hungary’s most popular commercial TVs.

At the end of the day, some meeting participants visited Válaszút Misszió Drogkonzultációs Iroda, learning about their services and the Hungarian context.

Tuesday began with C-EHRN’s director, Katrin Schiffer, opening the official programme for all participants of the event, also introducing C-EHRN’s new visual identity which we launched with the event! During the plenary sessions, we discussed various topics including drug policy and harm reduction in Hungary, civil society monitoring and data collection, and some of the network’s main activities, including research on harm reduction in prison and harm reduction and gender.

Throughout the afternoon’s parallel sessions, we also talked about infectious diseases in community-based settings in the context of the BOOST project, while a migration workshop took place through the SEMID-EU project, and those interested could find out about the application of foresight research in the context of the drugs field (Drug-Prep project). In the following sessions, the civil society involvement case studies conducted in 4 European countries were discussed, while we also spoke about drug consumption rooms and mental health.

Wednesday’s parallel sessions gave space for an engaging conversation about C-EHRN’s strategy for 2024-2028, while drug checking and the state of harm reduction in five European cities (Amsterdam, Bălţi, London, Esch-sur-Alzette and Warsaw) were also discussed.

The Semid-EU plenary delved into the needs and (harm reduction) service access of marginalised migrants who use drugs in the EU, after which we reflected on the outcomes of the time spent together at the member & expert meeting.

To capture the event, we bring you a collection of images below.