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Australia: Hepatitis C Infections Hit Record High

October 23, 2002

New hepatitis C infections in Australia have hit an all-time high of 16,000 a year, or one new infection every 32 minutes, prompting experts to predict a trebling of the number of people requiring liver transplants. At present there are 210,000 Australians with hepatitis C, with 91 percent of new infections occurring through shared injection drug equipment. In the next 18 years this figure could jump to anywhere from 321,000 to 836,000, according to Dr. Greg Dore of the National Center of HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research. "The only realistic possibility of keeping the number of infections below that upper range is if a vaccine becomes available, if HCV transmission among injection drug users is markedly reduced, or if treatments improve," said Dore. Australian Hepatitis Council President Stuart Loveday said that while Australia was the first country to have a national strategy for hepatitis C, it was largely unfunded. The hepatitis C crisis is being discussed at the 14th Annual Conference of the Australasian Society for HIV Medicine in Sydney.

Back to other CDC news for October 23, 2002

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Adapted from:
Sydney Morning Herald
10.23.02; Ruth Pollard

  
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This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
 
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More News on HIV/AIDS in Australia

 

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