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Alan Franciscus

Editor-in-Chief

HCV Advocate



Showing posts with label Epidemiology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epidemiology. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Hepatitis C in Children

—Alan Franciscus, Editor-in-Chief

It is estimated that Hepatitis C (HCV) occurs in about 0.15% of 6-11 year-olds and 0.4% of 12-19 year-olds.  It is estimated that there are 23,000 to 46,000 children in the US with HCV.1  The actual number of children with HCV is unknown because children are not routinely tested for it.

Prior to 1992, the most common transmission route for HCV in children was through blood transfusion, blood products, and organ transplantation.  Now that blood products and organs are screened for hepatitis C the most frequent transmission of hepatitis C in infants is mother-to-child transmission.  The second most common transmission route in children and teenagers is in those who share equipment to inject drugs (needles, cookers, cotton, water, etc.)

Transmission of HCV from an HCV-infected mother-to-infant occurs about 6% of the time.  It can occur up to 10% of the time if a mother is coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C.  Also, a high viral load increases the risk of mother-to-infant transmission.   Unfortunately, there are no effective strategies or drugs to prevent the transmission of HCV from mother to child.  

When a baby is born to an HCV-infected mother, the child will acquire the mother’s HCV antibodies. For this reason, the child will not be tested for HCV antibodies for 18 months.  This is the period that it takes for the baby’s body to clear out the mother’s antibodies.
An HCV RNA or viral load test can be given as early as one month.  It might be too early since the HCV RNA, or viral load fluctuates during the acute infection phase.  Also, babies have a high rate of natural clearance.  Most medical providers prefer to wait out the 18-month period to test for HCV antibodies and the confirmatory HCV RNA (viral load test).

Table 1.  Children for whom screening is recommended.
  • Children and adolescents with unexplained elevated aminotransferasesChildren at risk for vertically acquired HCV
  • Children from regions with high prevalence of HCV (adoptees, refugees, immigrants)
  • Children and adolescents with HIV
  • Children or adolescents who are victims of sexual assault
  • Adolescents with multiple sexual partners
  • Adolescents who are or were intravenous drug users, even if only once in the past
  • Children or adolescents who have ever been on dialysis
  • Sexual partner of HCV-infected person
  • Children or adolescent who have received needle stick (needles, piercing or tattooing)*
Source:  Mack CL1, Gonzalez-Peralta RP, Gupta N, et al. NASPGHAN practice guidelines:
Diagnosis and management of hepatitis C infection in infants, children, and adolescents Pediatric Gastroenterol, Nutr 2012;54:838-855

Baker R. Viral Hepatitis. In: Pohl JF, editor. Pediatric Gastroenterology. Baton Rougue, FL: CRC Press: 2014.  pp 313-327

*I read this recommendation with interest because we know that receiving a tattoo or piercing in a commercial parlor is safe.  .

Chronic Infection
Approximately 75% of infants who are acutely infected with hepatitis C will continue to chronic infection.  In children, the rate of disease progression is slow.  There is, however, a small percentage (estimated at less than 2%) of children in whom there is a rapid rate of disease progression that could lead to fibrosis and cirrhosis.

Watch, Wait and Protect
A baby born to an HCV-infected mother should receive the hepatitis A and hepatitis B vaccines to protect the child from becoming infected with another liver disease.  As well the baby and child should receive other immunizations to protect the health of the child.

Hepatitis C is not spread by casual contact and infected children should not be restricted from attending daycare or school.  Children should be taught that they should not share toothbrushes, nail clippers, razors or any other items that have the potential to transmit hepatitis C.

Any drug, herb or supplement that the child is given should be screened to make sure that it is liver safe.  When the child is older, a discussion should take place about sex, drugs, and alcohol.

Most importantly, a child should be medically monitored on a regular basis.

When to Tell a Child
Telling a child that they have hepatitis C can be one of the most difficult decisions a parent can ever make.  The timing is the most important decision.  The best advice is never to lie to a child.  We have an excellent fact sheet that can provide plenty of advice to parents.  http://hcvadvocate.org/hepatitis/factsheets_pdf/TellChild_HCV.pdf

Treatment
As stated above most children have a slowly progressive disease.  For the small percentage that have severe fibrosis or cirrhosis, immediate treatment may be needed.   The decision to treat or not is never easy and in children it is even more difficult.  Some questions that are important to consider include:


  • Can treatment be postponed until the interferon-free therapies are available?
  • Is there an interferon-free clinical trial that your child can enroll in?
  • Are you and your child ready to take on interferon treatment and the side effects?
  • The new medications are very expensive—there is always the possibility that your insurance company may not cover the new medications.


Current treatment of pegylated interferon plus ribavirin is approved for children who are three years and older with compensated cirrhosis.

Again, most children have slowly progressive disease, and it takes decades before serious liver disease develops.  By this time, children will age to adults and be eligible for interferon- and ribavirin-free therapies that approach 100% effectiveness.

The Future
Hepatitis C infections are on the rise.  The so-called Second Epidemic of hepatitis C is affecting females equally as males.  As a result, there will be many women of child-bearing age that will become pregnant and have children who may also have hepatitis C.

For the first time, there is an opportunity to prevent mother-to-child transmission. Direct-acting antiviral medications without ribavirin that are pregnancy category B.

Pregnancy Category B: In humans, there are no well-controlled studies. However, in animal studies, pregnant animals received the medicine, and the babies did not show any problems related to the medicine.

However, there have not been any clinical studies using the interferon- and ribavirin-free medications in pregnant women.  As a result, studies are needed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of these new drugs for the mother and the infant.

1American Liver Foundation
Source:  Hepatitis C in Children in Times of Changes, Robert D. Baker and Susan S. Baker Walters Kluwer Health, Inc.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Australia: Region has third highest hepatitis C numbers in NSW

"Only an estimated 1.7% of the population living with the blood-borne virus have accessed treatment."

THE Northern Rivers continues to have one of the highest number of hepatitis C cases in the state with 233 new notifications last year.

Figures from the NSW Hepatitis B and C Strategies 2014 annual data report rank the Northern NSW Local Health District third in the state with 79 hepatitis C notifications per 100,000 people.

Northern NSW Local Health District HIV and related programs manager Jenny Heslop said most of the 233 people notified had likely been living with hepatitis C for many years.


Read more...

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Snapshots Alan Franciscus, Editor-in-Chief

Article: Hepatitis C in children in times of change—RD Baker et al.
  Source:  Curr Opin Pediatr. 2015 Jul 18. [Epub ahead of print]

Results and Conclusions
The main focus of the abstract was when to initiate treatment and when it is safe to wait for approval of the new highly effective direct-acting antiviral therapies to treat hepatitis C (HCV).

Pegylated interferon and ribavirin is the current standard of care to treat children with hepatitis C.  There are pediatric clinical trials of sofosbuvir/ledipasvir, ribavirin, and Vieikira Pak, with and without ribavirin. Approval of these drugs is expected in the near future.    
The authors make a good case for their recommendations:
  • Wait: Children generally have a slow disease progression so in most cases it is safe to wait for the interferon- and ribavirin-free medications to be approved.

  • Treat: In the case of children who do have serious disease progression treatment now is warranted.  Genotype information should be factored into the treatment decision process since genotype 2 and 3 cure rates are higher and treatment durations are shorter with pegylated interferon and ribavirin combination therapy.   
The Bottom Line
All children with HCV should be monitored on a regular basis.  Any treatment decisions for children should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Editorial Comment
The general consensus is to wait (if possible) until the interferon- and ribavirin- free therapies are available. However, there is a small percentage of children with HCV who progress on to serious liver disease very quickly—this is why it is so important to identify and monitor children on a regular basis. 

It will be very interesting once the new therapies are approved to treat children with HCV.  Will insurance companies be as restrictive as they are with adults?  Hopefully not!  But if they are it just might be enough to raise the level of public ire to demand that they cover the medications for everyone.  It might also be enough that the public finally demand that the prices come down so that everyone affected by hepatitis C can afford the medications. 

Coming soon:  An Overview of HCV in Children

Article:  Prevalence of Cirrhosis in Hepatitis C Patients in the Chronic Hepatitis Cohort Study (CHeCS): A Retrospective and Prospective Observational Study—S C Gordon et. al
  Source:  Am J Gastroenterol. 2015 Jul 28. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2015.203. [Epub ahead of print]

Results and Conclusions
In the Chronic Hepatitis Cohort Study (CHeCS) there were 9,783 patients, 2,788 (28.5%) were cirrhotic by at least one method. Biopsy identified cirrhosis in only 661 (7%).  Other parameters, such as the International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) were not assigned to the biopsy proven cirrhosis results. 

The Bottom Line
The authors noted that the since the ICD-9 codes may not be the best codes to indicate the prevalence of cirrhosis and that there may be a ‘fourfold’ higher prevalence of cirrhosis in studies previously reported. 

Editorial Comment
This is an important study.  We need to understand the true prevalence of cirrhosis in this country.  It will help to push for better funding and making sure that people are treated sooner rather than waiting until people become sick. 

Article:  Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection Is Associated with Subclinical Coronary Atherosclerosis in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS): a Cross-Sectional Study—RA McKibben
  Source: J Infect Dis. 2015 Jul 27. pii: jiv396. [Epub ahead of print]
 
Results and Conclusions
Eighty-seven men with chronic hepatitis C were evaluated for the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Note: the study also looked at HIV and HIV/HCV coinfected men but did not find an association. 
The men were assessed for coronary plaque using non-contrast coronary CT and CT angiography and evaluated the associations of CHC with measures of plaque (substances that lead to hardening of the veins/arteries), prevalence, extent, and stenosis (narrowing of the veins). It was found that all types of plaques were significantly higher in men with chronic hepatitis C.

Bottom Line
This is not the first study that has shown that there are cardiovascular problems associated with hepatitis C.  But it is important to remember that this is a small study.  It also needs to be replicated in a larger patient population and in women with HCV. 


Editorial Comment:
As we come to understand more and more about hepatitis C it becomes clear how much damage hepatitis C causes to many organs outside of the liver.  Everyone with hepatitis C needs to be monitored on a regular basis.  In this case men and women need to be monitored for cardiovascular disease.  This is another reason why people with hepatitis C should be treated before these types of health issues are allowed to begin.


http://hcvadvocate.org/news/newsLetter/2015/advocate0815_mid.html#4

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Liver damage in hepatitis C patients significantly underestimated, says Henry Ford study

DETROIT - The number of hepatitis C patients suffering from advanced liver damage may be grossly underestimated and underdiagnosed, according to a study led by researchers at Henry Ford Health System and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The findings were the result of a study of nearly 10,000 patients suffering from hepatitis C, and could have a significant effect on patient care and healthcare policy regarding the chronic disease.

"Knowledge of the prevalence of liver damage will help decision making regarding screening for the effects of hepatitis C, when to start anti-viral therapy, and the need for follow-up counseling," says Stuart Gordon, M.D., lead researcher and Director of Hepatology at Henry Ford Hospital.

Read more...

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Hepatitis C rates in Oregon soar above national average

"About 80 percent of the people who die from hepatitis C in Oregon are between 45 to 64 years old."

When it comes to viral infections in Oregon, hepatitis C is far deadlier than AIDS.

report out this week shows that infections from hepatitis C remained fairly stable in Oregon between 2009 and 2013 but deaths from the virus climbed steadily over that period. They're now six times higher than deaths from AIDS.

"There are 5,000 people living with HIV in our state," said Dr. Ann Thomas, a public health physician. "There are almost 10 times as many people living with hepatitis C."

Read more...

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Most U.S. Hepatitis C Infections May Be Missed

TUESDAY, June 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- New cases of hepatitis C are drastically underreported to federal officials, researchers contend in a new study.

And they suggested that may be hampering public health efforts to cope with the chronic infection that can lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer.

The new study found that only one out of 183 Massachusetts residents diagnosed between 2001 and 2011 with acute hepatitis C infection was reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The rest went unreported, either because their test results didn't come back quickly enough or because the results didn't meet the strict CDC definition for hepatitis C infection, said senior study author Dr. Arthur Kim, director of the Viral Hepatitis Clinic at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Southern Illinois sees shocking rise of Hepatitis C

Cases of Hepatitis C -- a blood borne virus that attacks the liver and is spread via shared drug needles, unsterile tattoos and other means -- are on the rise. It's a "silent epidemic" waiting to strike many unsuspecting Baby Boomers and young adults, health officials warn, because the liver has a long memory. Even if you have forgotten what you did this past weekend, or in the freewheeling 1970s, your liver did not.  

Hoping to stem the tide of premature deaths from liver-related complications, lawmakers narrowly passed a bill in recent days that would require doctors to offer screening tests for patients considered high-risk for Hepatitis C.

It is curable in most cases, but left undetected can lead to cirrhosis of the liver and death.

Read more... 

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Thursday, May 7, 2015

Research shows Hepatitis C illness, death increasing in Arkansas

Hepatitis C (Hep C) infection is increasing in Arkansas, according to new research published in the May 2015 issue of the Journal of the Arkansas Medical Society. The research, conducted by physicians and epidemiologists from the Arkansas Department of Health and University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, showed that Hep C-related hospitalizations increased from 2,837 in 2004, to 4,141 in 2012. In addition, Hep C is now a leading cause or contributing factor in more deaths than HIV; the most recent data available suggests Hep C-related deaths occur at nearly twice the rate of HIV-related deaths.

Dr. Naveen Patil with the Arkansas Department of Health says, "We believe that in Arkansas there may be about 30,000 people who might be chronically infected and a majority of them may not be knowing about it. People who are infected at that time. It usually takes decades for people to manifest the disease of chronic infection, maybe 30-40-50 years. So we are seeing an increased burden of that disease with all it's chronic manifestations right now."

As a result, the Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) is encouraging all individuals born between 1945 and 1965, or anyone who is at risk for infection, get tested for Hepatitis C at least once. Testing is available at all 94 county health units, and individuals may also ask their primary care doctor about getting tested.

Read more...

Monday, May 4, 2015

Pakistan: Every 10th Pakistani suffering from hepatitis

LAHORE - Every 10th person in the country is suffering from one type of hepatitis or the other and the viral infection varies in severity from a self-limited condition with total recovery to a life-threatening or lifelong disease.

Over 20 million people in Pakistan are infected with hepatitis B and C virus including around 15 million with C and five million with B and the disease is swelling at an alarming rate, medical experts say.

“Owing to lack of preventive measures and treatment facilities, hepatitis prevalence in Pakistan is the highest on the globe.
  • Every 10th person is infected with hepatitis.
  • Over 1.
  • 5 lakh hepatitis patients die annually.
  • As such over 400 people are losing life to hepatitis every day.
  • Every year, over 1.
  • 5 lakh Hepatitis patients are added to the existing patient load,” said senior consultant and Principal Gujranwala Medical College Prof Aftab Mohsan.
 Read more...

Friday, May 1, 2015

Hepatitis C, HIV hits American Indians at high rate in Minnesota

DULUTH, Minn. — The rate of hepatitis C among American Indians in Minnesota is “terrifyingly higher” than for other racial and ethnic groups, a state epidemiologist said on Thursday. The occasion was the Health Department’s annual release of data for HIV/AIDS and hepatitis A, B and C in Minnesota.

The chronic liver disease — a virus that’s often abbreviated as HCV — also is seen at a relatively high rate outside of the Twin Cities metro area, said Kristin Sweet of the Minnesota Department of Health.

“A lot of people think hepatitis C is an urban issue,” Sweet said. “Our data do not hold to that.”

Read more....

Monday, March 23, 2015

India: Portal to create awareness on Hepatitis C launched


This was formally launched by E S L Narasimhan, Governor, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, at a function here on Monday.

Speaking on the occasion, D Nageshwar Reddy, Chairman of AIG, said out of an estimated 150 million people affected by Hepatitis C in the world, 15 million were from India.

See also:  Most Hepatitis C affected untreated in India

Monday, February 16, 2015

The Global Spread of Genotype 1 —Alan Franciscus, Editor-in-Chief

The origin of hepatitis C (HCV) is unknown.  The current theory is that it may have originated in horses, but while the virus found in horses is similar to the hepatitis C virus the scientific evidence linking it to hepatitis C is far from clear.   Where the virus originated is on more solid ground—it is believed to have originated in West Africa.  Hepatitis C is spread by direct blood-to-blood contact.  So how did it develop into such a huge problem with an estimated 130-150 million people infected worldwide?  How did genotype 1 become the most common genotype worldwide?  The answer to both questions is well-known—blood transfusions and unsafe injections. 

In the study “The Global Spread of Hepatitis C Virus 1a and 1b:  A Phylodynamic and Phylogeographic Analysis,” by G Magiokinis et al., the authors used a complicated system of analysis with various models (molecular clock & the Bayesian skyline demographic).   The model tracked how genotype 1a and 1b spread throughout the world.  First it was found that genotype 1a had a steady rate of expansion from about 1906 through the 1960’s.  Moreover, it was found that from the 1960’s through the 1980’s it dramatically expanded.  This corresponds to the increase in injection drug use from the 1960’s through the present day. 

Genotype 1b on the other hand expanded at a steady rate from 1922 to the late 1940s.  Then from the 1950’s until the 1980s it showed the greatest expansion.  Thus, the highest rate of expansion of genotype 1b was ~16 years before genotype 1a.   An interesting observation was that early on in the hepatitis C epidemic it was thought that genotype 1b led to more cases of liver cancer.  A possible explanation of this is that people with genotype 1b were infected longer and were more likely to have had more disease progression.   As the authors pointed out, the connection between genotype 1b, liver cancer and the earlier spread of genotype 1b needs to be validated  in future studies. 

To validate their findings of the earlier expansion of genotype 1b, however, the authors pointed to other evidence: 
  • All US military recruit samples from 1948-1955 were genotype 1b.
  • Older HCV-infected individuals are “systematically” or consistently genotype 1b.
Back to why genotype 1 is the most common genotype.  The most likely reason is that genotype 1 was introduced into developed western countries and spread by the introduction of blood transfusions, plasma pooling and unsafe injections (reuse or improper needle sterilization) of medicines to treat many diseases.  In the late 1920s through the present day the epidemic of injection drug use and sharing needles and drug preparation tools is another reason for the spread of HCV genotype 1.  

One has to wonder how different it would be if genotype 2 had been ‘the genotype’ that had been the one that had greatly expanded instead of genotype 1.  Treatment of genotype 2 produced very high cure rate early on in the history of treatment.  Still with current treatments we have the potential to eradicate hepatitis C in a lifetime. If only we could increase treatment access for everyone with hepatitis C. 

Facts about genotype 1:
  • Genotype 1 is the most common genotype worldwide at 83.4 million (46.2%) people.
  • Genotype 1 is the most common genotype in the United States at 70% of the population with HCV.
  • Genotype 1a and 1b are the most common subtypes; subtypes 1c, d, e, f, g, h, i, k and l have been identified but are uncommon.
  • The current standard of care for the treatment of hepatitis C can cure 90 to 100% of people who take the medications (HARVONI and VIEKIRA PAK).  Treatment durations are usually 12 weeks but vary from 8 to 24 weeks.
http://hcvadvocate.org/news/newsLetter/2015/advocate0215_mid.html#1

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Africa: Cultural practices may be driving hepatitis C infection rates in West Africa

Reports that suggest high rates of serologic false positives and low levels of viremia have contributed to uncertainty regarding the burden of active hepatitis C infection.

 A lack of knowledge surrounding the transmission and progression of hepatitis C virus infection in West African countries may be contributing to the spread of the disease, results of a study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases indicate.

"This is a small study conducted at a blood bank in a teaching hospital in Ghana," explained Jennifer Layden, MD, PhD, of Loyola University in Chicago, Ill., in a press release. “The goal is to further understand whom is affected by hepatitis C and to identify specific next steps in intervention and prevention.”

More than 180 million people have hepatitis C. In developed countries, hepatitis C infection is often transmitted through intravenous (IV) drug use, but this may not be the case in West Africa, noted the investigators.


Read more...

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Ghana: Hepatitis C More Prevalent Than HIV/AIDS or Ebola Yet Lacks Equal Attention

Loyola’s HepNet study reveals high frequency of active infection and multiple risk factors in Ghana

Newswise — More than 180 million people in the world have hepatitis C, compared with the 34 million with HIV/AIDS and the roughly 30,000 who have had Ebola. Yet very little is heard about the hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the way of awareness campaigns, research funding or celebrity fundraisers.

One of the global regions highly affected by hepatitis C is West Africa. In developed countries, hepatitis C, a blood-borne disease, is transmitted through intravenous (IV) drug use. “In West Africa, we believe that there are many transmission modes and they are not through IV drug use, but through cultural and every day practices,” says Jennifer Layden, MD, PhD principal investigator on a study recently published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases. “In this study, tribal scarring, home birthing and traditional as opposed to hospital-based circumcision procedures, were associated with hepatitis C infection in Ghana.”

The study was conducted by HepNet, an international multidisciplinary group of physicians and scientists. “The other important finding was that a high percentage of individuals who tested positive for HCV had evidence of active infection,” says Layden. “This illustrates the need for treatment.”

Read more....

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Egypt: Egypt has highest infection level of hepatitis C: study

According to a new study by researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar (WCMC-Q) and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK, Egypt has the highest infection level of the disease in the world. About 15% of the population carry HCV, with at least 100,000 new cases every year, but the proportion of these new infections that occur through different transmission routes is not well understood. This study is the first, for any country, to estimate the number of new cases of HCV as a consequence of mother-to-child (vertical) transmission.

The authors estimated that in 2008, between 3,000 and 5,000 new cases of the infection were caused by this transmission route, which can occur during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period from an infected mother to her child.

In addition, the findings show that mother-to-child transmission is an important transmission route among children under five years of age, contributing between a third and a half of new cases in that age group in Egypt.

Read more...

Friday, January 30, 2015

Local Hepatitis C cases hit all-time high

A dangerous viral infection saw a dramatic spike in cases in Ross County during 2014, according to year-end numbers from the Ross County Health District.

Hepatitis C cases in the county jumped from 153 in 2013 to 234 last year – an increase of 53 percent and an all-time high locally.

“This is easily the highest number of cases ever reported to us,” said Kathy Wakefield, director of Public Health Nursing at the Ross County Health District. “It’s very concerning, especially considering how big of an increase it was in just one year.”

Read more...

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

New treatments available in Alaska for Hepatitis C

ANCHORAGE –Hepatitis C is a disease that health officials say kills more Alaskans than HIV and AIDS, but according to state health officials, most of the people who have the virus don’t know it.

State Hepatitis prevention coordinator Ginger Provo says more than 16,000 Alaskans have been infected with the Hepatitis C virus since the state started keeping records in the mid 1990s. But Provo believes the real numbers are much higher. She said up to 75 percent of people who have the disease have not been diagnosed because many of them aren’t experiencing symptoms.

The one bright spot for the disease lies in its treatment. New drugs have been released recently that work better, faster and with fewer side effects than previous treatments, Provo says.

Read more...

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Australia: Aboriginal Hepatitis C rising, prompting calls for improved services

As rates of the disease decrease among Australians overall, Hepatitis C is three times higher and rising in Indigenous populations.

Mainstream medical services are failing Aboriginal communities, where the rate of Hepatitis C is rising, a peak Aboriginal health body has told a federal Senate inquiry.

A public hearing in Sydney on Thursday heard submissions from stakeholders, including the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (Naccho), which called for improved access and funding of medical services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

As rates of the disease decrease among Australians overall, Hepatitis C is three times higher and rising in Indigenous populations, according to a 2013 study by the Kirby Institute. The worsening problem is mainly due to higher rates of unsafe drug injecting and possibly higher rates of incarceration, where the prevalence of intravenous drug use is much higher among Indigenous prisoners, according to multiple studies.

Read more...

Monday, January 19, 2015

Canada: Cape Breton medical officer calls for more hepatitis C screening

About 5,000 Nova Scotians have contracted the infection. In 2013, Cape Breton recorded the second-highest rate of hepatitis C in the province — or about 24 per cent of all hepatitis C cases. 

SYDNEY — Cape Breton’s medical officer of health is encouraging the screening of patients for hepatitis C as a result of staggering rates of the disease.

Dr. Monika Dutt recently offered the advice to close to 60 doctors taking part in a family medicine gathering in Sydney.

“We have rates that are about double what we’re seeing in the rest of the province,” Dutt said in an interview with The Chronicle Herald on Sunday. “It’s something that been increasing over quite a few years now.”

Read more...

Thursday, January 15, 2015

UK: New Hepatitis C report tackles prevalence of disease in South Asian communities

In the South Asian community hepatitis C is often contracted through medical procedures associated with cultural practices.

Southall MP Virendra Sharma has helped launch a report tackling the high rate of hepatitis C in South Asian communities.

Virendra Sharma, MP for Southall recently chaired the development of the new report called The Challenge of Hepatitis C for the South Asian Community.

Mr Sharma launched the report in Parliament this week (Tuesday January 13) alongside fellow panel members which include like minded MPs healthcare professionals and organisations committed to combating the burden of hepatitis C

Read more....