The federal government on April 4 published a 3-year update of its viral hepatitis action plan that emphasizes the need to expand awareness of infection; improve surveillance, testing, and treatment; eliminate vaccine-preventable hepatitis; and reduce transmission of hepatitis C virus infection.
By 2020, the updated action plan calls for the United States to double the proportion of patients who know they have hepatitis B virus infection (from 33% to 66%); increase the percentage of patients who know they have HCV infection (from 45% to 66%); cut new HCV infections by 25%; and eliminate maternal-child HBV transmission.
Measures of progress include hepatitis B and C mortality and hepatitis B vaccination coverage among health care workers. The plan builds on recent strides in viral hepatitis prevention and treatment – including more widespread availability of safe, effective vaccines for hepatitis A and B and the development of highly effective direct-acting antivirals for chronic hepatitis C infection.
But despite these advances, 3.5-5.3 million Americans still have viral hepatitis, and most do not know they are infected. Sequelae of these infections cause 12,000-18,000 deaths annually – a higher death toll than that from HIV, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.
The agency authored the plan with input from the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Justice’s Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.