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Getting Hepatitis
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The World Health Organization says as many as two billion people are infected with the hepatitis
B virus. More than three hundred fifty million of those infected have lifelong infections. WHO
officials say an estimated six hundred thousand people die each year as a result of hepatitis B.
The virus is in the same group as the herpes and smallpox viruses. Hepatitis B vaccines have
been given since the nineteen eighties. The W-H-O says the vaccine is ninety-five percent
effective in preventing the development of infection.
Hepatitis B spreads when blood from an infected person enters the body of another person. An
infected mother can infect her baby. The virus can also spread through sexual activity, and if
people share injection devices.
Blood products from an infected person can spread hepatitis B. People also can get infected if
they share personal-care products that might have blood on them. Some examples are
toothbrushes and sharp hair-cutting instruments.
Worldwide, most hepatitis B infections are found in children. Young children are the ones most
likely to develop a chronic or lifelong infection. The risk of such an infection is small for
children older than four years.
About ninety percent of babies infected with hepatitis B during the first year develop chronic
infections. Such persons are at high risk of death from liver disease or liver cancer. The hepatitis
B vaccine is considered to be the first medicine that can protect people against liver cancer.
Hepatitis C is even more dangerous. Like hepatitis B, it spreads when blood from an infected
person enters someone who is not infected.
The hepatitis C virus belongs to the same group of viruses as yellow fever and West Nile virus.
Most people living with hepatitis C develop chronic infections, often without any signs. They are
at high risk for liver disease and liver cancer.
The World Health Organization says about one hundred seventy million people are infected with
hepatitis C. That is three percent of the population of the world! The WHO. also says that as
many as four million more become infected each year. It warns that those infected may develop
diseases of the liver, including liver cancer. The WHO says the highest rates of infection are in
Africa, Asia, and Central and South America.
The hepatitis C virus was first observed in nineteen seventy-four. But it was not officially
recognized as a new kind of hepatitis until nineteen eighty-nine. Scientists have been working to
develop a vaccine and other treatments.
Last month, the journal Lancet reported that a combination of two experimental drugs could
clear the infection in eight to twelve weeks. However, researchers are still studying the effects of
the treatment.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says about three million Americans are infected
with hepatitis C. The rates are highest among people born between nineteen forty-five and
nineteen sixty-five. Those especially at risk include persons who inject themselves with drugs
and those who received blood or blood products before nineteen ninety.
Hepatitis D is spread through blood, but only infects people who already have hepatitis B. The
hepatitis D virus greatly increases the chance of severe liver damage. Experts say the virus
infects about fifteen million people around the world. They say it also appears in five percent of
persons infected with hepatitis B.
Doctors say the best way to prevent hepatitis D is to get vaccine that protects against hepatitis B.
Doctors can treat some cases of hepatitis B, C and D. The drugs used are costly, however. But
they are less costly than getting a new liver.
The fifth virus is hepatitis E. Experts say it spreads the same way as hepatitis A -- through
infectious waste. Cases often result from polluted drinking water. Medical science recognized
hepatitis E as a separate disease in nineteen eighty.
Hepatitis E is also found in animal waste. Studies have shown that the virus can infect many
kinds of animals.
The WHO says many hepatitis E cases have been reported in Central and Southeast Asia, North
and West Africa and Mexico. No vaccines or medicines are effective against hepatitis E. Most
people recover, usually in several weeks or months. But the disease can cause liver damage. In
some cases, hepatitis E can be deadly.
The virus is especially dangerous to pregnant women. Twenty percent of those living with
hepatitis E die in the last three months of pregnancy.
Scientists discovered yet another kind of hepatitis in the nineteen nineties. It has been named
hepatitis G. The hepatitis G virus is totally different from any of the other hepatitis viruses.
Donald Poretz is an infectious disease specialist in Washington, DC. He says the hepatitis G
virus is spread through blood and blood products. But he says the virus has not been found to
cause any real disease.
The World Hepatitis Alliance works to increase knowledge about the dangers of hepatitis. The
group says people should know that the disease kills about one million five hundred thousand
people each year. It also says one in twelve people worldwide is living with hepatitis B or
hepatitis C. And, it says, most of those infected do not even know it.
Hepatitis cannot be cured. The only way to protect against infection is to receive vaccines against
hepatitis A and B, and to avoid contact with the other viruses. And that may be difficult.
Remember that some kinds of hepatitis spread through sex or sharing needles. Blood products
should be carefully tested for hepatitis. People in high-risk groups and those who have had
hepatitis should not give blood. They also should not agree to leave their organs to others after
they die. Donated organs can also spread hepatitis.
Experts say people can take other steps to protect themselves. These include always washing
your hands with soap and water after using the restroom and before preparing or eating food.
Experts say travelers should not drink water of unknown quality when visiting foreign or
unknown areas. They also should avoid eating uncooked fruits and vegetables.
This SCIENCE IN THE NEWS was written by Brianna Blake. George Grow was our producer.
Im Steve Ember.
And Im Barbara Klein. Listen again next week for more news about science in Special English
on the Voice of America.