National 
                  Viral Hepatitis Roundtable Applauds National AIDS Strategy's 
                  Recognition of HIV/HCV Coinfection
                
                  
                   
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                          | SUMMARY: 
                            The National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) praised 
                            the inclusion of hepatitis B and C coinfection in 
                            the White House Office of National 
                            AIDS Policy's National HIV/AIDS Strategy released 
                            last week, given that an about 30% of HIV 
                            positive people also have HCV 
                            and approximately 10% also have HBV. 
                            The advocates also expressed hope that the administration 
                            will take a similar comprehensive approach to hepatitis 
                            B and C monoinfection, the latter of which affects 
                            about 4 times as many people as HIV. |  |  |  | 
                   
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                Below 
                  is the text of a press release issued by the National Viral 
                  Hepatitis Roundtable.
                NVHR: 
                  Administration's National HIV/AIDS Strategy
                  Recognizes Need for Better Care Coordination for
                  Individuals Co-Infected with Viral Hepatitis
                Washington, 
                  DC -- July 14, 2010 -- With millions of Americans living with 
                  HIV/AIDS, chronic viral hepatitis, or a combination of both, 
                  the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) welcomes the 
                  Administration's recognition of the need for better care coordination 
                  and integration of services for these individuals and supports 
                  recommendations contained within the new National HIV/AIDS Strategy 
                  released yesterday in Washington. As the Administration's interagency 
                  working group on viral hepatitis works to meet an October 1, 
                  2010 deadline for its own action plan, NVHR is hopeful that 
                  we will see a similar national commitment from the Administration. 
                  An estimated 5.3 million Americans are infected with chronic 
                  viral hepatitis, which is 4 times the estimated HIV/AIDS population. 
                  Chronic viral hepatitis is a leading cause of death in HIV patients 
                  in America.
                  
                  "NVHR welcomes the Administration's recognition of the 
                  need for better care coordination for individuals afflicted 
                  with HIV/AIDS," said Ms. Lorren Sandt, NVHR Chair and Executive 
                  Director of Caring Ambassadors Program, based in Portland, OR. 
                  "With approximately 30 percent of all individuals living 
                  with HIV/AIDS co-infected with hepatitis C and 10 percent co-infected 
                  with hepatitis B, an integrated, comprehensive strategy is critical 
                  if we are going to win the war against these insidious diseases. 
                  The outdated 'silo' approach undermines quality and leads to 
                  higher costs throughout the system." 
                  
                  The Administration's national HIV/AIDS strategy provides a model 
                  for how to galvanize the entire public health infrastructure 
                  into action. With policymakers, clinicians, and others stakeholders 
                  seeking to transform our system into one based on preventive 
                  care, early intervention to screen, detect, and treat viral 
                  hepatitis is essential. With most Americans unaware they are 
                  infected, chronic viral hepatitis progresses far too often to 
                  liver cancer, cirrhosis, or liver failure. Delayed screening 
                  and treatment leads to billions of dollars in avoidable health 
                  care costs. Milliman estimates that public and private payers' 
                  cost of treating chronic viral hepatitis C alone will more than 
                  triple by 2024 to $85 billion unless Washington acts. While 
                  proposed legislation would help address this crisis, NVHR believes 
                  more needs to be done.
                  
                  "Just like yesterday's HIV/AIDS announcement, the viral 
                  hepatitis plague demands leadership from the highest levels 
                  of the federal government," added Ms. Sandt. "Otherwise, 
                  millions of Americans will be at risk of developing life-threatening 
                  complications." 
                  
                  About NVHR
                  
                  NVHR is a coalition of more than 150 public, private, and voluntary 
                  organizations dedicated to reducing the incidence of infection, 
                  morbidity, and mortality from chronic viral hepatitis that afflicts 
                  more than 5 million Americans. 
                For 
                  more information, see www.nvhr.org.
                  
                  7/20/10
                Source
                  National 
                  Viral Hepatitis Roundtable. NVHR: Administration's National 
                  HIV/AIDS Strategy Recognizes Need for Better Care Coordination 
                  for Individuals Co-Infected with Viral Hepatitis. Press release. 
                  July 14, 2010.