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A new study challenges the prevailing wisdom that high rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) among members of the baby boom generation are a result of their youthful experimentation with drugs, unsafe tattooing and risky sex, aidsmap reports. Publishing their findings in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, researchers analyzed 45,316 sequences of genotype 1a of hep C, which is the dominant strain in North America.

The scientists concluded that hep C saw its greatest infection rates between 1940 and 1965. These rates tapered at the end of this period and plateaued between 1965 and 1989. The 1990s saw falling infection rates, and starting in 2000, the rates rose modestly.These patterns suggest that, in fact, unsafe medical procedures are the root cause of the virus’s spread among baby boomers. This generation was too young during the period of the epidemic’s vast expansion for members to have largely contracted the virus from behaviors—including injection drug use—that are more common among young adults. Furthermore, the post–World War II era saw a great upswing in the number of medical procedures.

Proper safety measures, such as the introduction of disposable syringes during the 1950s, were slower to come onto the scene.Blood transfusions were likely largely responsible for transmissions between 1965 and 1989 given that thorough screening for hep C in the blood supply did not begin until 1992.

 

"Looks Like Boomers Didn’t Get Hepatitis C From Youthful Drug Use After All." Web log post. Https://www.hepmag.com/. N.p., n.d. Web.              

 

 

 

 

 

 

HCV News Nov 9 2015

HCV News Week Ending 11/09/2015 Feds Worry That Low-Income People May Not Get Hepatitis Cure 'Confronting the consequences of high-priced drugs, the Obama administration Thursday pointedly reminded states that they cannot legally restrict access by low-income people to revolutionary cures for liver-wasting hepatitis C infection. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also sent…
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Hepatitis News week of Aug 3

HCV News Week Ending 08/03/2015 Living with Hep C; the stigma, the mortality and the hope 'A woman who has been living with what she calls one of the most misunderstood and stigmatised diseases for almost 30 years has spoken out for the first time. 56 year old Janie Kibble from Tamworth in Northern NSW has…
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HCV News Week Ending 06/15/2015

Hepatitis C's hidden dangers -- a personal perspective: Navin Vij (Opinion) 'As a physician, I have often found myself struggling with the concept of why some things happen to certain patients and not to others. When trying to find answers to such questions, I have often turned to the words of my mother: "Everything happens…
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HCV News Weekending June 8, 2015

HCV News Week Ending 06/08/2015 Woman sues Anthem Blue Cross for denying hepatitis C drug Harvoni 'The virus could win. It wants to do to Shima Andre what it already has done to so many thousands of people worldwide: Drain her of energy. Change the color of her skin. Make her panic when she feels…
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HCV News Week of 6-1-15

HCV News Week Ending 06/01/2015 Climbing for Carleen: One family's mission to change the way people think about hepatitis C 'In 2011, Carleen and James McGuffey had just moved to Colorado Springs from Texas when they found out Carleen was pregnant with the couple's sixth child. They were ecstatic. But it wasn't long after that…
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HCV news week of 5/4/15

HCV News Week Ending 05/04/2015 CDC Warns of Overlapping HIV and Hep C Outbreaks Among IDUs 'The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued an alert to public health departments and clinicians nationwide to be vigilant for HIV outbreaks similar to Indiana's, while warning of overlapping hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission among injection…
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HCV News of the week

HCV News Week Ending 04/05/2015 Needle exchanges gain currency 'An increasing number of state and local officials are considering setting up needle exchanges in the wake of the spread of HIV and hepatitis C among intravenous drug users. The problem comes in tandem with rising intravenous use of heroin and prescription opioid analgesics nationwide.' Cannabis…
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HCV News of the week

HCV News Week Ending 03/16/2015 Depression, poor mental health linked to stress, antiviral therapy in HCV patients 'Depression and poor mental and physical health were associated with stressful life events, low social support and other socioeconomic and demographic factors in patients with hepatitis C virus infection enrolled in the Chronic Hepatitis Cohort Study.' Hepatitis C…
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Legislation, help needed

Representatives Mike Honda, Hank Johnson, and Judy Chu are asking all House Representatives to sign an important letter supporting a doubling in funding for hepatitis B and C programs in the Fiscal Year 2016 appropriations bill (see text of letter below). This is the same increase in funding that President Obama recommends in his proposed…
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