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Some
viral hepatitis infections can increase the chance of liver cancer
Viral hepatitis is one of the leading
killers across the globe, with a death toll that matches Aids or tuberculosis,
research in the Lancet suggests.
The report estimates that hepatitis
infections and their complications led to 1.45m deaths in 2013 - despite the
existence of vaccines and treatments.
World Health Organization data shows
there were 1.2m Aids-related deaths in 2014, while TB led to 1.5m deaths.
'Startling findings'
Researchers say these plans must be put
into action urgently to tackle the crisis.
Viral hepatitis refers to five different
forms of virus (known as A, B, C, D, E) - some can be spread through contact
with infected bodily fluids and others (A and E) through contaminated food or
water.
Most deaths worldwide are due to B and
C, which can cause serious liver damage and predispose people to liver cancer.
But because people don't always feel the symptoms of the initial infection,
they can be unaware of the long-term damage until it is too late.
Scientists from Imperial College London
and the University of Washington examined data from 183 countries, collected
between 1990 and 2013.
They found the the number of deaths
linked to viral hepatitis rose by more than 60% over two decades - partly due
to a growing population.
Deaths from diseases such as TB and
malaria have dropped.
Dr Graham Cooke of Imperial College
London described the findings as startling.
He said: "Although there are
effective treatments and vaccines for viral hepatitis, there is very little
money invested in getting these to patients - especially compared to malaria,
HIV/AIDS and TB.
"We have tools at our disposal to
treat this disease - we have vaccines to treat hepatitis A and B and we have
new treatments for C.
"However the price of new medicines
is beyond the reach of any country - rich or poor."
The study suggests the problem is
biggest in East Asia. But unlike many other diseases, deaths
from viral hepatitis were higher in high and middle income countries than in
lower income nations.
The WHO hepatitis strategy, which was
put forward in May 2016, includes targets to reduce new cases of hepatitis B
and C by 30% by 2020, alongside a 10% reduction in mortality.
The WHO says countries and organisations
will need to expand vaccination programmes, focus on preventing mother-to-child
transmission of hepatitis B and increase access to treatment for hepatitis B
and C, to help ensure these targets are met.
Source:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-36717828
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