The UK is "woefully unprepared" for an epidemic of the deadly liver
disease hepatitis C, a charity has warned.
|
Key recommendations
|
A UK wide strategy on prevention, care and treatment
A comprehensive testing programme to identify all at-risk people
Investment in diagnosis and referral services
Monitoring of disease rates
Better access to social and healthcare services for all patients
Assessment of new treatments
Public education campaign
|
The British Liver Trust (BLT)
estimates that the disease could kill more than 60,000 people in the next
decade.
It is estimated that there are already up to 400,000 people in the UK
who are infected with the hepatitis C virus. It is about 10 times more
infectious than HIV.
The charity is calling for urgent action to identify people who are
unaware that they have been infected with the virus.
Often symptoms of infection take many years to show.
An opinion poll, commissioned by the trust, showed widespread public
ignorance about hepatitis C.
The virus can be spread through blood transfusion, sharing injecting
equipment and infected piercing instruments.
However, 53% of those questioned chose unprotected sex as one of the
main ways to pass on the disease, even though this is a less important
route of transmission.
Targeted programme
The report outlines key failings in the delivery of liver services
across the UK and the implications for public health and the cost to the
NHS.

This is a disease where cost effective treatment is already
available but one where government inaction risks depriving
thousands of people of lifesaving treatment

|
|
Nigel Hughes
|
The BLT wants the government to
develop a targeted testing programme for at-risk groups to identify the
400,000 people in the UK who are estimated to be infected to enable them
to be treated early enough to maximise the chances of successful
treatment.
Effective treatment is already available in the UK although the NHS
treats only approximately 10% of the patients as France and Germany.
Nigel Hughes, BLT chief executive, said: "We stand on the verge of an
epidemic of hepatitis C across the world, yet the UK is woefully
unprepared.
"We lag far behind Europe and the United States in educating the public
about the risks and in identifying and treating patients.
"This is a disease where cost effective treatment is already available
but one where government inaction risks depriving thousands of people of
lifesaving treatment."
Mr Hughes said extra money set aside for health in the budget should be
used to remedy the situation.
A Department of Health spokesperson said the importance of hepatitis C
as a public issue had been highlighted in the Chief Medical Officer's
strategy for tackling infectious diseases.
"We have worked with a group of experts including Nigel Hughes from the
British Liver Trust on the preparation of a strategy to tackle Hepatitis
C.
"Indeed many of the issues raised by the British Liver Trust will be
addressed in the government's own proposals to be published this summer."