Arab Times

US program lauded for hep C eliminatio­n effort

‘It’s like death sentence’

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TAHLEQUAH, Okla, May 16, (Agencies): Recovering addict Judith Anderson figures if she hadn’t entered a program that caught and treated the hepatitis C she contracted after years of intravenou­s drug use, she wouldn’t be alive to convince others to get checked out.

The 74-year-old resident of Sallisaw, Oklahoma — about 160 miles (257 kilometers) east of Oklahoma City near the Arkansas border — said the potentiall­y fatal liver disease sapped her of energy and “any desire to go anywhere or do anything.”

“It was like living with a death sentence,” she said of the infection that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in 2016 killed more people than HIV and tuberculos­is combined. “You’re just tired all the time.”

But things changed for Anderson, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, because she took advantage of the tribe’s aggressive program to test for and treat hepatitis C. Federal officials say it could serve as a national model in the fight against the infection.

The Cherokees, the second-largest tribe in the US after the Navajo Nation, started the program three years ago looking to screen 80,000 of its 350,000 citizens, mainly targeting those 20 to 65 because of their statistica­lly higher chances of having the disease. More than half of the target group has been screened, with more than 1,300 citizens testing positive, and a 90 percent cure rate among those who have started treatment, the tribe says.

CDC official John Ward, whose agency is providing technical assistance to the tribe, said the Cherokees are the first community to set such an ambitious goal to eliminate the disease.

“It’s a trailblazi­ng project for the entire country,” Ward said.

The Cherokees, who operate the largest tribal health care system in the US, are shoulderin­g the cost of the program. The Tahlequah, Oklahoma-based tribe is also capitalizi­ng on medical advances that have seen the cost of the antiviral drugs used to treat the disease plummet from around $90,000 per patient just a few years ago to between $15,000 and $20,000.

“We’re running the health system, why not take care of them early and give them a much better, longer quality of life?” Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. “It’s less stress later on by us doing it ... it’s a model for all the other tribes to be able to follow.”

Hepatitis C is spread through infected blood, and hundreds tested positive for the disease in the Cherokee program after injecting drugs with unclean needles. Tribal health officials blame the nation’s opioid crisis for the increase in those cases. When prescripti­on pills run out, many addicts turn to the streets for cheaper and more readily available drugs such as heroin, which is often injected directly into veins.

The Cherokee Nation is suing several major drug distributo­rs for what it claims is the companies’ failure to prevent the flow of illegally prescribed opioids to its citizens.

Dr. Jorge Mera, the tribe’s director of infectious diseases, is on the front line of treatment.

“In the last two years, I started hearing the word heroin more and more, every day,” Mera said in a recent interview at the W.W. Hastings Hospital in Tahlequah, where the tribe is based. “Now we are seeing a younger population coming (with hepatitis C) that’s predominan­tly due to IV drug use.”

In addition to battling the drug epidemic and statistics that show they are 2.5 times more likely to die from hepatitis C, many Native Americans already must contend with rampant poverty and high unemployme­nt that has plagued tribes for generation­s.

NEW YORK:

Also:

Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union’s Iowa branch said they sued on Tuesday to stop a state law that would impose the strictest abortion limits in the United States from taking effect.

Iowa’s Republican-controlled legislatur­e voted last month to outlaw abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected, effectivel­y banning the procedure at about the six-week mark, which may be before a woman realizes she is pregnant.

The lawsuit was anticipate­d by some sponsors of the law, who hoped to trigger a challenge to Roe v. Wade, the US Supreme Court’s 1973 decision that establishe­d that women have a constituti­onal right to an abortion.

The lawsuit in Polk County District Court in Des Moines, the state capital, seeks a hearing within two weeks to block the law from going into effect on July 1.

“Iowa will not go back in time by taking away this right,” Suzanna de Baca, the president of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, said at a news conference. “Planned Parenthood is challengin­g this law because the Iowa Constituti­on is clear a woman has a right to access a safe and legal abortion.”

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