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KERRY & HONDA: Disrupting a
deadly disease
Hepatitis defense can save thousands of lives a year
By Sen. John Kerry and Rep. Michael M. Honda
The Washington Times
6:54 p.m., Tuesday, August 10, 2010
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/aug/10/disrupting-a-deadly-disease/
A silent killer is loose in America. It contributes to the
death of 15,000 Americans a year and threatens the health of 5.3
million more. It is more common than HIV/AIDS. It is the leading
cause of liver cancer - a cancer that is on the rise and
continues to be a fatal and costly disease. Yet it remains
unrecognized as a serious threat to public health.
This silent killer is viral hepatitis. Most people don't even
know they have it until years later, when it causes cancer or
liver disease. But we can help avoid such needless tragedies
with prevention and surveillance programs and by educating
Americans on the pervasive nature of hepatitis B and hepatitis
C.
A first step is to change the way viral hepatitis is diagnosed
and treated, and that is why we have introduced legislation in
the Senate and the House to provide almost $600 million over the
next few years to treat this deadly epidemic. Our legislation
will make our health care system more efficient. More important,
it will save lives.
The bills we have introduced closely mirror the recommendations
in a recent report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM),
"Hepatitis and Liver Cancer," which calls for a national
strategy to prevent and control hepatitis B and C.
The report concludes that the current approach is not working:
Americans at risk for hepatitis or living with it do not know
it, and health providers are not screening for it. That should
come as no surprise because there is no federal funding of core
public health services for viral hepatitis. Nor is there any
federally funded chronic hepatitis B and C surveillance system.
Not surprisingly, the IOM report recommends increased
information and awareness about chronic viral hepatitis among
health care providers, social service providers and the public;
improved surveillance for hepatitis B and hepatitis C; and
better integration of viral hepatitis services.
Our call for a national strategy is not unlike IOM's.
Specifically, our bills increase interagency coordination
between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the National Cancer
Institute (NCI), the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA), the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA), the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA).
It sets up programs to improve understanding of hepatitis B and
C and requires the CDC to integrate them into existing
immunization, prevention and control programs and support
counseling. It also expands current vaccination programs and
establishes a national chronic and acute hepatitis B and C
surveillance program to identify incidence and prevalence in
viral hepatitis and liver cancer.
Hepatitis B is 100 times more infectious than HIV and, left
untreated, can cause liver disease, liver cancer and premature
death decades after infection. About 2 billion people worldwide
have been infected with hepatitis B, and about 170 million
people are chronically infected with hepatitis C. Tragically,
two-thirds of those infected, on average, are unaware of their
status, which increases the chance of spreading the disease.
We cannot afford to be silent anymore. Our fellow citizens are
dying daily because our nation lacks a comprehensive prevention,
education and medical management program. Each year, about
15,000 people die from liver cancer or liver diseases related to
hepatitis B and hepatitis C. That's more than 40 deaths every
day.
Beyond the tragic and preventable loss of human life, there is
the economic cost. Although the costs of education, research and
treatment are not trivial, they are substantially less than the
annual health care cost attributable to viral hepatitis in the
United States.
Without effective prevention and vaccination methods, chronic
hepatitis B and C are expected to cost our country billions of
dollars in the coming years. The baby-boomer population is
estimated to account for two out of every three cases of chronic
hepatitis C. As these Americans age and enter into Medicare,
they are likely to develop complications and require expensive
medical interventions. In the next decade, the costs of
hepatitis C to commercial insurance and Medicare will more than
double, and within 20 years, Medicare costs will increase
fivefold. Projecting further out, over the next 20 years, total
medical costs for patients with hepatitis C infection could
increase more than 2.5 times - from $30 billion to more than $85
billion.
Contrast the costs for early detection and intervention with the
costs for treatment post-infection. The costs for hepatitis B
vaccinations vary but range from $75 to $165, whereas treatment
can cost up to $16,000 per year. Screening for hepatitis C is
also relatively inexpensive compared to treatment, which can
cost up to $25,000 per year. Untreated, these infections will
develop into liver disease that can cost up to $110,000 per
hospital admission.
Moreover, the United States is entering an era of effective
therapy for chronic viral hepatitis. Improvements in current
treatment and therapies are likely to be approved in the next
several years that can double cure rates and cut the length of
treatment in half and could confer increasingly greater
benefits.
Until then, though, we have no time to waste. Our legislation,
along with strategic investments in public health and prevention
programs, will save billions of dollars and the lives of tens of
thousands of people all over America. We urge our colleagues to
support activities that promote early detection and education.
Our legislation will sound the alarm on this silent killer.
Sen. John Kerry is a Massachusetts Democrat, and Rep. Michael M.
Honda is a California Democrat.
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