• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Combating The Hepatitis Scourge

by Editorial
2 years ago
in Editorial
Hepatitis
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

The international community commemorated World Hepatitis Day (WHD), yesterday. The annual event is usually organized to raise awareness of the burden of viral hepatitis and to influence real change.

Advertisement

The theme for this year’s event,  “We’re not waiting”  is a call to action  to accelerate elimination efforts of viral hepatitis, a group of infectious diseases known as hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E,  and the urgent need for testing and treatment for those who need it.

The date, 28 July, was chosen 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.

The World Health Organisation (WHO), in it’s statement to commemorate the day, said there are over one million hepatitis-related deaths every single year, and one new chronic infection every ten seconds.

Combined, hepatitis B and hepatitis C cause 1.1 million deaths and three million new infections every year, with 350 million people living with chronic viral hepatitis infection.

RELATED

TISSF And Matters Arising

TISSF And Matters Arising

15 hours ago
Fire Destroys 10 Shops In Adamawa

That Massacre In Katsina Mosque

2 days ago
ADVERTISEMENT

The WHO added that 3,000 people die from hepatitis every day which equates one hepatitis death every thirty seconds.

“Over 8,000 new hepatitis B and C infections occur each day. That’s over five infections every minute.”

If the current trajectory continues, viral hepatitis, which means inflammation of the liver, could kill more people annually than malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS combined by 2040.

ADVERTISEMENT

Although there are many different types of hepatitis viruses (A to E), hepatitis B and C are the most concerning and cause nearly 8000 new infections every day, which are mostly going undetected.

According to the health organisation, low coverage of testing and treatment is the most important gap to be addressed in order to achieve the global elimination goals by 2030.

Using the 9.5 per cent prevalence to Nigeria’s estimated 211.4 million population in 2021, the United Nations estimate that the prevalence  figure translates into 20.083 million  of Nigerians who have the virus.

According to the former minister of health, Dr Ehanire, though the country has more than 20 million people living with hepatitis B, C, or both; more than 80 per cent of the people who have the disease do not know their status.

Somehow, these millions have been missing in the public health space, not only in Nigeria but also in the global public health agenda.

In the opinion of this newspaper, so many hepatitis deaths could be prevented because there are vaccines and effective treatments for hepatitis B and even a cure for hepatitis C .

Most symptoms only appear once the disease is advanced, resulting in a huge volume of undiagnosed people living with hepatitis and, even after diagnosis, the level of treatment and care for people living with hepatitis is astonishingly poor.

When hepatitis is diagnosed, the number of people who go on to receive treatment is incredibly low as most people discover they have hepatitis B or C after many years of silent infection, and only when they develop serious liver disease or cancer.

Only 10 per cent of people with chronic hepatitis B are diagnosed, while only 22 per cent of those receiving treatment,  that’s just two per cent of the total global health burden.

Similarly, only 21 per cent of people with hepatitis C are diagnosed, while 62 per cent of those diagnosed receive treatment to cure them,  just 13 per cent of the total global health burden.

Due to poor level of awareness, most Nigerians  still don’t know what Hepatitis is, as some people in the rural areas confuse Hepatitis with Hypertension.

Most worrisome is that nine out of 10 patients in Nigeria don’t even know they have the virus because it does not manifest symptoms on time.

Even after being confirmed positive, some Nigerians due to paucity of funds patronize local herb sellers for treatment and in most cases, the chemicals in the herbs aggravate the disease, affecting their kidneys,  while increasing the risk of fatality.

There’s no gainsaying the fact that there’s so much to be done and many milestones to be covered by the government in order to reduce the fatalities arising from this silent killer.

Meanwhile, this newspaper has noticed a gradual shift of the government’s responsibility to non governmental organisations (NGOs) and philantrophic organisations like Rotary who have taken this public health concern as their project, as they engage in sensitisation,  free screening and provision of free treatment for Nigerians.

Though commendable, we are calling on the health authority to take ownership by increasing it’s promotion of awareness of this deadly disease and provide screening and treatment when necessary for sufferers.

In our considered opinion, the federal government needs to commit adequate funding to eliminate the virus in the country.

Funding is extremely necessary to increase advocacy, public enlightenment, and access to diagnosis.


Join Our WhatsApp Channel

Nigerians can now earn US Dollars monthly by acquiring domains cheaply and reselling for profits up to $18,000 (nearly ₦30Million). Beneficiaries include professionals, entrepreneurs, civil servants and more. Click here to start.


Tags: Hepatitis
SendShare10170Tweet6356Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Transcorp Grows Pre-tax Profit By 39% To N18.5bn In H1

Next Post

Resolving The Leadership Quagmire

Editorial

Editorial

You May Like

TISSF And Matters Arising
Editorial

TISSF And Matters Arising

2025/08/27
Fire Destroys 10 Shops In Adamawa
Editorial

That Massacre In Katsina Mosque

2025/08/26
EFCC Arrests Accountant Over New Naira Notes Racketeering
Editorial

EFCC Deserves Praise, Not Litigation

2025/08/25
Ribadu Leads Delegation To Chad President Deby
Editorial

One Celebration Too Early

2025/08/24
33.3% Nigerians, Ghanaians Risk Developing Kidney Disease — Study
Editorial

Beyond The Subsidy On Kidney Dialysis

2025/08/23
BREAKING: Federal Gov’t Reverses 18-yr Entry Age For Varsity Education
Editorial

Embargo On New Tertiary Institutions

2025/08/22
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

Tinubu Departs Brazil En Route Abuja

Tennis Scoring System

JUST-IN: Davido, Rema, Others Top As AFRIMA Releases 2025 Nominations List

Federal Gov’t Orders Shutdown Of Illegal Gold Mining Site In Gwagwalada

Niger Delta People Live On $2 Daily Despite $1trn Oil Revenue — INC

BBNaija10: Dede, Kola Spark Intimacy Rumours After Late-night Moment

IGP Speaks On ‘Cattle Theft’ As Terrorism Financing At INTERPOL Conference

Reverse Abia’s New Tax Regime, It’s Stifling Businesses, Ikonne Tells Gov Otti

‘Tinubu Directed Me To Work With You’, New APC Chair Yilwatda Tells Ganduje

Dafinone Felicitates Gov Oborevwori, Deltans On 34th Anniversary

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.