Abstract
Background
Prisons are complex environments where there is a high risk of transmission of blood borne viruses, including hepatitis C (HCV). Providing trustworthy information in such settings can be challenging. This article presents the findings from a qualitative study examining interpersonal trust between people in prison and other individuals from whom they access information regarding HCV (health professionals, custodial officers, and peers).
Methods
In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted across 12 prisons in New South Wales, Australia, with 30 participants that had a history of injecting drug use. Questions addressed topics including awareness of HCV and harm reduction information sources. Data analysis was guided by two frameworks examining the affective and cognitive determinants of trust and the domains of fidelity, competence, honesty, confidentiality, and global trust.
Results
In general, health professionals were seen as trustworthy, while custodial officers were seen as untrustworthy. In contrast, the trustworthiness of peers was dependent on the individuals and the context. Peers were trusted if they had previous experience with HCV or were considered an ‘elder’ of their group, whereas others were not trusted due to a perceived lack of competence or fidelity.
Conclusions
Information about HCV must come through trusted sources such as health professionals, selected peers, and, typically, not custodial officers. Affective and cognitive determinants of trust, as well as the domains of fidelity, competence, honesty, confidentiality, and global trust, are evident and should be leveraged to develop harm reduction interventions that will be trusted and adopted by people in prison.
Acknowledgements
The HITS-p investigators include: Andrew Lloyd, Kate Dolan, Paul Haber, William Rawlinson, Carla Treloar, Greg Dore, Lisa Maher, and Fabio Luciani.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).