| 31 Octobre 2017
World Hepatitis Summit 2017 calls for accelerated action to eliminate viral hepatitis
 
 31 October 2017, São Paulo, Brazil - On the eve of the World Hepatitis  Summit in Brazil, WHO reports increasing global momentum in the  response to viral hepatitis. A record 3 million people were able to  obtain treatment for hepatitis C over the past two years, and 2.8  million more people embarked on lifelong treatment for hepatitis B in  2016.
 
 “We have seen a nearly  5-fold increase in the number of countries developing national plans to  eliminate life-threatening viral hepatitis over the last 5 years,” says  Dr Gottfried Hirnschall, Director of WHO's Department of HIV and Global  Hepatitis Programme. “These results bring hope that the elimination of  hepatitis can and will become a reality.” 
 
 Hosted by the Government of Brazil, the World Hepatitis Summit 2017 is  being co-organized by the World Health Organization and the World  Hepatitis Alliance. The Summit aims to encourage more countries to take  decisive action to tackle hepatitis, which still causes more than 1.3  million deaths every year and affects more than 325 million people.
 
 “We cannot lose sight of  the fact that last year 194 governments committed to eliminating viral  hepatitis by 2030. For sure we are still a long way from this goal but  that doesn’t mean it’s some unattainable dream. It’s eminently  achievable. It just requires immediate action,” says Charles Gore,  President of World Hepatitis Alliance. “The World Hepatitis Summit 2017  is all about how to turn WHO’s global strategy into concrete actions and  inspire people to leave with a ‘can do’ attitude.”
 
 “Brazil is honored to host the World Hepatitis Summit 2017  – and welcomes this extraordinary team of experts, researchers,  managers and civil society representatives to discuss the global health  problem posed by viral hepatitis,” says Dr Adele Schwartz  Benzaken, Director of the Brazilian Ministry of Health’s Department of  Surveillance, Prevention and Control of STIs, HIV/AIDS and Viral  Hepatitis.”Brazil is committed to taking recent advances in its response  to hepatitis forward – on the road to elimination.”
 
 Progress in treatment and cure
 
 Many countries are demonstrating strong political leadership,  facilitating dramatic price reductions in hepatitis medicines, including  through the use of generic medicines—which allow better access for more  people within a short time.
 
 In 2016, 1.76 million people were newly treated for hepatitis C , a  significant increase on the 1.1 million people who were treated in 2015.  The 2.8 million additional people starting lifelong treatment for  hepatitis B in 2016 was a marked increase from the  1.7 million people  starting it in 2015. But these milestones represent only initial steps –  access to treatment must be increased globally if the 80% treatment  target is to be reached by 2030. 
 However, funding remains a major constraint: most countries lack adequate financial resources to fund key hepatitis services.
 
 Diagnosis challenge
 
 To achieve rapid scale-up of treatment, countries need urgently to  increase uptake of testing and diagnosis for hepatitis B and C. As of  2015, an estimated 1 in 10 people living with hepatitis B, and 1 in 5  people living with hepatitis C, were aware of their infection. Countries  need to improve policies, and programmes to increase awareness and  subsequent diagnosis.
 
 Prevention gaps 
 
 Countries need to provide a full range of hepatitis prevention services  that are accessible to different population groups, particularly those  at greater risk.
 
 Largely due to increases in the uptake of hepatitis B vaccine, hepatitis  B infection rates in children under 5 fell to 1.3% in 2015, from 4.7%  in the pre-vaccine era.
 
 However, the delivery of other prevention services, such as birth-dose  vaccination for hepatitis B, harm reduction services for people who  inject drugs, and infection control in many health services, remains  low. This has led to continuing rates of new infections, including 1.75  million new hepatitis C cases every year.
 
 Need for innovation 
 
 Innovation in many aspects of the hepatitis response must continue. New tools required include a functional cure for hepatitis B infection  and the development of more effective point-of-care diagnostic tools  for both hepatitis B and C.
 
 “We cannot meet the  ambitious hepatitis elimination targets without innovation in prevention  interventions and approaches, and implementing them to scale,” said Dr  Ren Minghui, Assistant Director-General for Communicable  Diseases, WHO. “The great successes of hepatitis B vaccination  programmes in many countries need to be replicated and sustained  globally in the context of moving forward to universal health coverage.“
 
 Implementation of elimination strategy
 
 The World Hepatitis Summit 2017 will be attended by over 900 delegates  from more than 100 countries, including Ministers of Health, national  programme managers, and representatives from organizations of people  affected by viral hepatitis. The Summit will review progress and renew  commitments by global partners to achieve the elimination of viral  hepatitis by 2030 – a target reflected in WHO's elimination strategy and  the UN Sustainable Development Goals.









