Why hepatitis remains an uphill battle for Africa
Cape Times
|July 28, 2025
Viral hepatitis is a silent disease with devastating consequences
GLOBALLY, viral hepatitis remains an unrecognised burden of disease, with the World Health Organisation estimating that in 2022, 254 million people were living with hepatitis B and 50 million people living with hepatitis C worldwide.
Six thousand people were newh infected with hepatitis B and C oath day, resulting in 3 500 deaths per day. This is despite hepatitis B being entirel vaccine preventable, and treatable witl the nucleotide analogue tenofovir costing less than $32 per year. Hepatitis C is now curable with an 8or 12-week course of direct acting antivirals.
The Global Viral Hepatitis response is offtrack towards World Health Organisation 2030 goals: 90% of people living with hepatitis B and C should be diagnosed and 80% treated; and 90% of newborns should have received time-ous Hepatitis B birth dose vaccine with 90% coverage of Universal Hepatitis B 3-dose vaccine.
Hepatitis B is 100 times more infectious than HIV and 10 times more infectious than hepatitis C and is transmissible as a result of exposure to Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) infected body fluids via perinatal, percutaneous or sexual routes.
In Africa, including South Africa, hepatitis B is mainly acquired as a result of mother-to-child transmission or early childhood acquisition under the age of 5 from infected siblings or playmates with adult sexual acquisition being uncommon.
Individuals with chronic hepatitis B infection have a 15-40% risk of developing cirrhosis, liver failure or hepatocellular carcinoma, and 15-25% risk of dying from HBV-related liver diseases.
The risk of chronicity is dependent on the age of acute infection: 70-90% for infants exposed perinatally (HBeAg positive mother); 25-50% for children aged 1-5 years; 6-10% for 5-20 years and 1-3% for adults >20 years.
HBV remains endemic in Africa, IN AFRICA, about 7.8 million people are infected with hepatitis C with only 13% diagnosed and 3% treated, says the writer.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition July 28, 2025 de Cape Times.
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