Create medical coverage for Hepatitis patients
July 28
World Hepatitis Day
falls on 28 July every year, because it is the birthday of Nobel-prize-winning
scientist Dr Baruch Blumberg, who discovered hepatitis B virus (HBV) and
developed a diagnostic test and vaccine for the virus.
Hepatitis is the term
used to describe inflammation of the liver. It is usually the result of a viral
infection or liver damage caused by drinking alcohol. It is caused by a variety
of infectious viruses and noninfectious agents leading to a range of health
problems, some of which can be fatal. There are five main strains of the
hepatitis virus, referred to as types A, B, C, D and E.
The date of 28 July was
chosen as World Hepatitis Day. Low coverage of testing and treatment is the
most important gap to be addressed in order to achieve the global elimination
goals by 2030.
Hepatitis affects
hundreds of millions of people throughout the world, causing acute and chronic
diseases and killing some 1.34 million people every year. In some countries,
hepatitis B is the most common cause of cirrhosis and may also cause liver
cancer.
World Hepatitis Day is
now recognized in over 100 countries each year through events such as free
screenings, poster campaigns, demonstrations, concerts, talk shows, flash mobs
and vaccination drives, amongst many others. Each year a report is published by
the WHO and the World Hepatitis Alliance detailing all the events across the
world.
WHO aims to achieve
hepatitis elimination by 2030. To get there, WHO calls on countries to achieve
specific targets: Reduce new infections of hepatitis B and C by 90 per cent;
Reduce hepatitis-related deaths from liver cirrhosis and cancer by 65 per cent;
Ensure that at least 90 per cent of people with hepatitis B and C viruses are
diagnosed; At least 80 per cent of those eligible receive appropriate
treatment.
Myanmar is making
utmost efforts to ensure medical coverage for Hepatitis B patients by
manufacturing drugs for the disease. The Hepatitis B Vaccine Factory was
established in Ywathagyi of the Yangon Region to produce a sufficient number of
pills for the patients and the surplus is exported to foreign countries.
Moreover, the government
is fulfilling the needs of medicines for patients suffering from various types
of Hepatitis viruses while conducting research to produce new pills for
fighting against the virus of the diseases in various ways. That is why it is
necessary to provide healthcare for Hepatitis patients in various types for
saving their lives and recovering their livelihoods in a long-term plan. GNLM

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