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Mission to eliminate hepatitis C

A team led by Addenbrooke's is on track to eliminate the deadly virus hepatitis C from the east of England by 2025, with targets now reached in Wisbech in Cambridgeshire and Grays in Essex.

Hep C van
Drop in testing at the Grafton Centre in Cambridge, one of the many locations across the region the community hep C van visits.

As part of a national campaign, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) is co-ordinating rapid testing, liver scanning and treatment across the region.

This enables people to get quick, convenient testing, near to where they live as well as reaching at-risk people who may find it difficult to travel long distances to hospital-based services.

It’s spearheaded by a community van and specialist team, visiting community clinics, support groups, town centres, places of worship, drug and alcohol services, probation services and prisons.

Watch: Rachael Bates from CUH explains more about hep C and how it can be tested and treated.

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6jmbRQHAA8

Video transcript: Rachael

00:00:03:00 - 00:00:04:11

So we've bought our Hep C

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testing van to Cambridge today.

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We cover the whole of the eastern region

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and we are testing for hepatitis

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C, which is a blood borne virus.

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It goes from blood to blood.

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Risk factors would be tattoos, piercings,

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any sort of drug use, sniffed

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or injected,

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and old tattoos and health care abroad.

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And it's just a simple finger prick,

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it's such an easy test now.

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And you get the results in 10 minutes.

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So we're out there spreading awareness

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so that people can get

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the new easy treatment that's available,

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which is just a course of tablets,

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and it's 96% successful.

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So the message is Easy to test.

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Easy to treat. Easy to cure.

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When I first started about six years ago,

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everything was very much in the hospital.

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All the treatments, the clinics,

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everything like that.

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So we've

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now come to a time

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when it's really important

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for us

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to come out of the hospital

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and be visible and meet people

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that really need the treatment

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that perhaps don't know

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they've got hep C

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or they can't come to treatment

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or to the clinics for whatever reason.

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So we're now out

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making testing and treatment

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so much more accessible to everybody.

A multidisciplinary team is involved in this mission, including former patients who work as peer advocates, nurse specialists, social and outreach workers, radiographers and expert technicians, all working to find, treat and cure patients.

Last year the team tested 2,729 people and 509 started treatment. Since April this year, 903 people have been tested and 216 have started treatment, an increase so far year on year.

John Wortley runs the eastern region hepatitis C Operational Delivery Network for CUH. He says:

“Reaching our targets in Wisbech and Grays is the result of a huge team effort. To keep the virus at bay we will need to keep monitoring those areas for re-infection, but as things stand, we’ve achieved our goal and eliminated hep C from those communities. Our mission now is to do the same across the region, with many areas on track to achieve this."

No matter who you, where you are, or what your personal situation is, there is support to ensure that you can get tested and treated for hepatitis C.

John Wortley, CUH manager of the eastern region hepatitis C Operational Delivery Network

Both testing and treatment has improved in recent years, with no need for liver biopsies and injections.

Testing usually involves a finger prick test or mouth swab.

Treatment is easy to take and accessible, involving 8-12 weeks of tablets with few or no side effects and a 96% cure rate.

56 year old Mark Brunning was treated by the team for hepatitis C 5 years ago, having lived with the virus for around 20 years. He became infected as a drug user and was diagnosed but struggled to access effective testing and treatment. He now works as a patient advocate for the service. He says:

“I’ve seen friends die of hepatitis C. They didn’t get the treatment they needed, mainly because it wasn’t accessible enough and they didn’t get the right support. That’s changed now, and this service is going out of its way to find those people and offer them lifesaving care."

Watch: the impact of hep C on former patient Mark Brunning

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJGrrv6MJQg

Video transcript: Mark

00:00:03:07 - 00:00:03:19

I think a

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lot of the

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problem, there is a stigma attached

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to having hepatitis C

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because most people just think, you know,

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people who inject drugs.

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But it's more than that.

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I mean, yeah, that was how I was got it.

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But that was never my intention.

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And because of the recovery community

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that I'm involved with,

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I do know a lot of people

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who've got hepatitis C or have had it.

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I remember there's a

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friend from Colchester who

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developed liver cancer because that's

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one of the long term

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problems with hepatitis C

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is that you can get liver cancer from it.

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And he died on the operating table.

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Another friend of mine

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had had really bad liver cirrhosis

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and had to have a liver transplant,

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and he ended up in

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and out of Addenbrooke’s for months,

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more than a year,

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because of all the problems

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associated with that.

My message is simple - get tested, get treated, get cured.

Mark Brunning, former hepatitis C patient

Hepatitis C is a blood borne virus (goes from blood to blood). Transmission can be through; old/homemade tattoos/piercings, current/past drug use (sniffed and injected), anal sex, blood transfusions before 1991 and healthcare abroad (see more details below).

The virus goes in to the liver cells and replicates itself, which over several years can cause serious liver scarring and complications. With a lack of clear symptoms, people can be infected with hepatitis C and go undiagnosed for many years. If left too long, the virus can cause fatal liver damage and possibly lead to liver cancer.

The NHS has an ambitious plan to eliminate hepatitis C from England before the global goal of 2030.

It’s estimated tens of thousands of people are still infected country-wide and tracking these people down is key to eliminating the virus.

Once treatment is completed, we truly feel we have helped deliver life-changing care.

Selena White, Wisbech community clinic

Rachael Bates is a clinical nurse specialist and works on the CUH community van. She says:

‘Eliminating hepatitis C is key to improving the health of both individuals and the wider community. It promotes peoples long-term health, improves their quality of life, and reduces the risk of developing major illnesses.’

In Wisbech in Cambridgeshire, Selena White runs a local community clinic which is part of the CUH hepatitis C service. She says it’s crucial to raise awareness of hepatitis C and break the stigma it carries. She says:

“In rural Wisbech and Fenland, we have gone the extra mile to visit service users in the community to complete testing. The impact we see when service users test positive is heartfelt and with support from the CUH team, we can deliver treatment within our clinic, where patients feel comfortable.

Charlotte Brown is Peer Co-ordinator in the eastern region for the UK charity, The Hepatitis C Trust. She says:

“ The Hepatitis C Trust’s peer-to-peer support programme involves staff and volunteers with lived experience of the virus engaging with others at risk of and living with hepatitis C and encouraging and supporting them to get tested and treated. This shared lived experience is often crucial for engaging people who are less likely to engage with healthcare services.

“By working closely with our colleagues in the NHS, we are making progress towards eliminating the virus within the next few years.”

More information about hepatitis C