Available evidence suggests that by 2040, viral hepatitis deaths will outnumber HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria deaths combined if viral hepatitis is not appropriately addressed. In the absence of proactive national strategies to raise awareness, actively engage with communities to scale up hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening uptake, and decentralize HCV care to make it more accessible, particularly among key populations with the highest HCV burden, countries will not be able to find the missing millions of people living with HCV.
Seven years into the Global Health sectors strategy on HIV, viral hepatitis, and STIs for 2016–2021, in which the World Health Organization (WHO) set out a strategy to eliminate viral hepatitis by 2030, only 21% of the 58 million people estimated to be living with HCV have been diagnosed, and about 400,000 people die from the disease each year. Low- and middle-income countries account for about 75% of the global HCV burden, with India, Pakistan, Nigeria, and China alone being home to over 50% of people living with HCV.
HCV is the only chronic infectious disease that can be cured with 8–12 weeks of treatment.
As a result, the disease can be controlled and eliminated with appropriate national strategies that address stigma and prioritize key populations for diagnostics and treatment with all-oral pangenotypic direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). Generic versions of DAAs are commercially available, and cost less than $100 in a few countries.
However, based on Polaris Observatory studies, only 11 countries (Australia, Canada, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, the country of Georgia, Japan, Norway, Spain, and the United Kingdom) are on track to achieving the HCV elimination goals by 2030. An additional 22 countries are expected to meet these goals between 2031 and 2050.
A policy brief, developed by Treatment Action Group (TAG), presents online survey data from 23 countries on some of the key HCV diagnostics and policy barriers that inhibit access to HCV care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).
As the target year for viral hepatitis elimination, 2030, approaches, the policy brief demands that:
Source : hepCoalition
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