A new study,
worked on by B.C. researchers, says baby boomers living a sex and drug
lifestyle in the 1960s aren't to blame for hepatitis C infections in
their demographic.
In fact, the research suggests all baby boomers should be tested for the hep C virus because widespread hospital practices predating the 1950's likely led to many accidental transmissions.
"Hepatitis C among baby boomers has been previously linked to sex and
drugs," said Dr. Jeff Joy, lead author. "As such, [hep C] testing has
long carried a substantial stigma. Our results should go a long way to
remove this persistent barrier to testing among baby boomers."
Researchers from the BC Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back-dated 40,000 cases of hep C and discovered the peak of the infection epidemic actually occurred in 1950, not 15 years later during the height of the North American sex and drug revolution, as was previously thought.
They are consistent with research from other locations such as France, Italy, Japan and Russia which showed hep C infection rates leveled off when disposable needles and syringes became the norm.
"Reduced stigma will facilitate widespread testing and timely access to life-saving treatment," said Dr. Julio Montaner, Director of the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.
Hepatitis C infection can cause cirrhosis, liver cancer and other serious conditions.
In fact, the research suggests all baby boomers should be tested for the hep C virus because widespread hospital practices predating the 1950's likely led to many accidental transmissions.
Dr. Jeff Joy says hep C infections in baby
boomers have incorrectly been stigmatized as being linked to a sex and
drug lifestyle. (SFU.ca)
Researchers from the BC Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back-dated 40,000 cases of hep C and discovered the peak of the infection epidemic actually occurred in 1950, not 15 years later during the height of the North American sex and drug revolution, as was previously thought.
Inadequate hospital sterilization
The findings suggest an increase in medical procedures post World War II and inadequate hospital sterilization of reusable needles and syringes are the culprits.They are consistent with research from other locations such as France, Italy, Japan and Russia which showed hep C infection rates leveled off when disposable needles and syringes became the norm.
"Reduced stigma will facilitate widespread testing and timely access to life-saving treatment," said Dr. Julio Montaner, Director of the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.
Hepatitis C infection can cause cirrhosis, liver cancer and other serious conditions.
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