World Hepatitis Day

The World Hepatitis Day is celebrated every year on 28 July and serves as a reminder of the World Health Organisation’s Global Strategy to eliminate Viral Hepatitis by 2030. This day is an opportunity for all organisations with special interest in hepatitis to add momentum to all efforts to implement the WHO’s first global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis for 2016-2021 and help Member States achieve the final goal – to eliminate hepatitis.

 

World Hepatitis Day 2018Read: Global Hepatitis Report 2017  Watch: Collaboration of World Hepatitis Alliance with TIF

Key information

  1. Viral hepatitis is a major global health problem and needs an urgent response.
    There were approximately 325 million people living with chronic hepatitis at the end of 2015.
    Globally, an estimated 257 million people were living with hepatitis B (HBV) infection, and 71 million people were living with hepatitis C (HCV) infection in 2015.
  2. Very few of those infected accessed testing and treatment, especially in low- and middle-income countries.
    By the end of 2015, only 9% of HBV-infected people and 20% of HCV-infected people had been tested and diagnosed. Of those diagnosed with HBV infection, 8% (or 1.7 million people) were on treatment, while 7% of those diagnosed with HCV infection (or 1.1 million people) had started treatment in 2015.
    The global targets for 2030 are: 90% of people with HBV and HCV infections tested and 80% of eligible patients are reached with treatment.
  3. Viral hepatitis caused 1.34 million deaths in 2015 – comparable with TB deaths and exceeding deaths from HIV. Hepatitis deaths are increasing
  4. New hepatitis infections continue to occur, mostly hepatitis C.
    The number of children under five living with chronic HBV infection was reduced to 1.3% in 2015 (from 4.7% before vaccines were introduced).
    Hepatitis B vaccine is preventing approximately 4.5 million infections per year in children.
    However, 1.75 million adults were newly infected with HCV in 2015, largely due to injecting drug use and due to unsafe injections in health care settings in certain countries.
  5. Achieving the 2030 elimination goal is not overly ambitious; reports from 28 high-burden countries give cause for optimism.
    On World Hepatitis Day 2017, WHO published information from 28 countries which show that, despite many challenges, the global effort to eliminate hepatitis is gaining ground. However, major obstacles still remain.
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