| Literature DB >> 35992037 |
Sophie E Cousineau1, Aysegul Erman2,3, Lewis Liu4, Sahar Saeed5, Lorraine Fradette6, Jordan J Feld7, Jason Grebely8, Sonya A MacParland9,10, Naglaa H Shoukry6, Giada Sebastiani11,12, Selena M Sagan1,13,12.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) affects approximately 250,000 Canadians. Although safe and effective (>95% cure rates) antiviral therapies have become available within the past 5 years, chronic HCV infection still remains a major driver of end-stage liver disease and liver transplantation. Both the Canadian Institute for Health Research and the Public Health Agency of Canada recognize the impact of HCV-related liver diseases and support the Canadian Network for Hepatitis C (CanHepC), a National network for the scientific study of hepatitis C that organizes an annual symposium as part of its knowledge translation mandate. At the 8th Canadian Symposium on Hepatitis C Virus in May 2019, basic scientists, clinicians, epidemiologists, social scientists, and community members came together to share their work under the theme of "Improving diagnosis and linkage to care". This symposium also marked the launch of the Blueprint to inform hepatitis C elimination efforts in Canada, a policy framework that outlines specific targets, suggested activities, and evidence-based best practices to guide provincial, territorial and federal organizations developing their own HCV elimination strategies.Entities:
Keywords: CanHepC; behavioural; biomedical; clinical; epidemiological; hepatitis C virus; people who inject drugs; public health; social sciences; viral hepatitis
Year: 2020 PMID: 35992037 PMCID: PMC9202804 DOI: 10.3138/canlivj.2019-0032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can Liver J ISSN: 2561-4444