| Literature DB >> 28277217 |
Erika F Duffell1, Dagmar Hedrich2, Otilia Mardh1, Antons Mozalevskis3.
Abstract
The World Health Organization 'Global Health Sector Strategy on Viral Hepatitis 2016-2021' aimed at the elimination of viral hepatitis as a public health threat provides a significant opportunity to increase efforts for tackling the epidemics of hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus infections across Europe. To support the implementation and monitoring of this strategy, core epidemiological and programmatic indicators have been proposed necessitating specific surveys, the systematic collection of programmatic data and the establishment of monitoring across the care pathway. European Union and European Economic Area countries already made progress in recent years implementing primary and secondary prevention measures. Indeed, harm reduction measures among people who inject drugs reach many of those who need them and most countries have a universal hepatitis B vaccination programme with high coverage above 95%. However, while a further scaling up of prevention interventions will impact on incidence of new infections, treating those already infected is necessary to achieve reductions in mortality. The epidemiological, demographic and socio-political situation in Europe is complex, and considerable diversity in the programmatic responses to the hepatitis epidemic exists. Comprehension of such issues alongside collaboration between key organisations and countries will underpin any chance of successfully eliminating hepatitis. This article is copyright of The Authors, 2017.Entities:
Keywords: Keywords: hepatitis B; elimination; hepatitis B virus; hepatitis C; hepatitis C virus; monitoring, indicators; people who inject drugs, injecting drug use; prevention; public health policy; strategy; viral hepatitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28277217 PMCID: PMC5356432 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.9.30476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Core indicators for the World Health Organization’s monitoring and evaluation framework for hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus elimination 2016–2021
| Indicator number | Indicator name |
|---|---|
|
| Prevalence of chronic HBV and HCV infection |
|
| Infrastructure for HBV and HCV testing |
|
| a. Coverage of timely hepatitis B vaccine birth dose (within 24 hours) and other interventions to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HBV |
|
| Needle–syringe distribution |
|
| Facility level injection safety |
|
| People living with HCV and/or HBV diagnosed |
|
| a. Treatment coverage for hepatitis B patients |
|
| a. Viral suppression for chronic hepatitis B patients treated |
|
| a. Cumulated incidence of HBV infection in children 5 years of age |
|
| Deaths from hepatocellular carcinoma, cirrhosis and liver diseases attributable to HBV and HCV infection |
HBV: hepatitis B virus; HCV: hepatitis C virus.
Source: [6].