The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Work remains in Canada to eliminate hepatitis C

- Laurie Edmiston Laurie Edmiston is executive director of CATIE, Canada’s source for HIV and hepatitis C informatio­n. July 28 is World Hepatitis Day.

Hepatitis C is a serious viral infection that affects more than 220,000 Canadians. A person can live with the virus for 20 to 30 years before symptoms start to manifest, which is both a blessing and a curse. Because it can go undiagnose­d for so long, hepatitis C can cause serious damage to the liver, and if left untreated, even death.

With 44 per cent of hepatitis C cases undiagnose­d in Canada, we are sitting on a ticking public-health time bomb. Undiagnose­d cases can lead to more severe health problems down the road – liver damage, cancer and fatalities – resulting in an even greater burden to our health-care system.

Thankfully, there are now medication­s that cure more than 95 per cent of people with hepatitis C. These newer treatments are more effective, shorter in duration, and carry fewer sideeffect­s than the previous generation of medication­s. And as of last year, they are accessible through public health insurance plans in every province and territory across Canada.

The feasibilit­y of curing every Canadian with hepatitis C has opened up the possibilit­y that we could actually eliminate the virus as a public health threat. In 2016, our government joined 193 countries signing on to an internatio­nal commitment to do just that by 2030. Many of these countries leapt immediatel­y into action.

Egypt, which has the unfortunat­e distinctio­n of leading the world in cases of hepatitis C, now boasts the highest number of people cured of the infection. Egypt’s progress has been so remarkable that it has set its own ambitious target to eliminate hepatitis C by 2020, a decade earlier than the rest of the world.

Australia pioneered a universal treatment strategy that expanded access to treatment through co-operation with the pharmaceut­ical industry, and expanded treatment delivery from liver specialist­s to primary care physicians in order to cure more people, more quickly. Australia has also invested resources and support into harm reduction and other services for people who use drugs, preventing new infections and re-infections after a person is cured. The country is on track to meet its eliminatio­n targets in 10 to 15 years.

Other jurisdicti­ons have taken a micro-eliminatio­n approach to meet their targets. This involves eliminatin­g hepatitis C in specific geographic areas, population­s, age groups or settings. One prison in Spain, El Dueso, virtually eliminated hepatitis C through a “test and treat” program and by offering harm reduction services such as a needle and syringe program.

Within one year of signing on to global targets for hepatitis C eliminatio­n, 82 countries had already put eliminatio­n plans into place, and one-third of these plans were financed. In contrast, Canada has been slow to act on its hepatitis C eliminatio­n targets, or even to develop a real action plan.

Our federal government has proposed a framework to eliminate hepatitis C, among other blood-borne infections. But with health care falling under provincial jurisdicti­on, the only way to turn these words into action is through a coordinate­d (and funded) action plan in concert with all levels of government, from coast to coast.

An action plan to diagnose and treat all Canadians with hepatitis C, with tangible targets and funding to back it up, could help us cure these individual­s before their health-care costs start to snowball.

Canada’s leading hepatitis C experts have already laid out the blueprint for such an action plan. Through the Canadian Network on Hepatitis C (CanHepC), they have published a comprehens­ive document that outlines proven approaches from Canada and abroad to help scale up the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis C. The Blueprint to Inform Hepatitis C Eliminatio­n Efforts in Canada is a menu of options for decision-makers to develop their own action plans, tailored to the context and needs of their regions, to ensure we meet our commitment to eliminate hepatitis C once and for all.

With a simple and effective cure at our disposal, and a blueprint for action ready to be adopted, all it takes for us to join the other 193 countries committed to eliminatin­g hepatitis C is political will.

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