WHO All Set to Organize World Hepatitis Day on 28th July
Geneva (ABC Live): The world health fraternity is
all set to organize the World Hepatitis Day on July 28, 2012 with theme “It’s
closer than you think”, WHO is urging governments to strengthen efforts to
fight viral hepatitis, an inflammation of the liver that kills about one
million people every year.
As per an estimated 500 million people experience
chronic illness from their infection with hepatitis; it is a major cause of
liver cancer and liver cirrhosis.
“The vast majority of people infected with
hepatitis are unaware, undiagnosed and untreated,” says Dr Sylvie Briand of
WHO’s Pandemic and Epidemic Disease Department. “Only by increasing awareness
of the different forms of hepatitis, and how they can be prevented and treated,
can we take the first step towards full control of the disease and save
thousands of lives.”
Types of hepatitis
There are five hepatitis viruses defined by types –
type A, B, C, D and E. Types B and C are of significant concern since a high
proportion of people infected with these viruses may not experience symptoms at
the early stage of the disease, and only become aware of their infection when
they are chronically ill. This can sometimes be decades after infection. In
addition, these two viruses are the leading cause of liver cirrhosis and cancer,
accounting for almost 80% of all liver cancer cases.
People can get hepatitis from either infected
bodily fluids or contaminated food and water depending on the type of
hepatitis.
- Types B, C and D are contracted through the blood of an infected person (e.g. through unsafe injections or unscreened blood transfusions) and in the case of hepatitis B and C, also through unprotected sex.
- Type D only infects persons who are already infected with type B.
- Types A and E are typically transmitted via contaminated water or food and closely associated with poor sanitation and poor personal hygiene (e.g. unwashed hands).
Effective vaccines are available for all the virus
types, except C.
Given the scale of the epidemic - with 1 in 12
people chronically infected - and recent advances in prevention and treatment,
the World Health Assembly in 2010 designated 28 July as World Hepatitis Day.
The Day serves to promote greater understanding of hepatitis as a global public
health problem and to stimulate the strengthening of preventive and control
measures against infection in countries throughout the world.
New framework
In preparation for this year’s World Hepatitis Day,
WHO is launching a new global framework to tackle the disease. The
Prevention and control of viral hepatitis infection: Framework for global
action describes four areas of work to prevent and treat hepatitis
infection.
Raising awareness, together with promoting
partnerships and mobilizing resources constitute the first of the four
priorities in WHO’s new framework. The others are: transforming scientific
evidence into policy and action; preventing transmission; and screening, care
and treatment.
WHO will work with its Member States and partners
on all four priority areas of the framework to help expand access to
prevention, care and treatment programmes to people who need it. The framework
will guide the development of regional and country-specific strategies to
combat hepatitis.
Jatinder Kaur's Views:
Hepatitis viruses are more serious than any of other, because it start slowly but attacked rest of systems. the World Health Organization organizing World Hepatitis Day on July 28, make alert to all that we should care our liver, the organ responsible to regulate our digestive system.
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