I am a 57-year-old white American male infected with Hepatitis C. I am involved in a controlled medical research study by Roche Pharmaceuticals of an experimental Polymerase Inhibitor (RO5024048 also known as RG7128) drug therapy for the virus. This document is the story of my illness and the experience of treatment. My lovely and pretty damn wonderful wife will be contributing her take on the experience as well.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

World Hepatitis Day – Who Knew?

Thursday July 28, seven days ago, was World Viral Hepatitis Day. The day was dedicated to raising awareness of all types of viral hepatitis and the populations they affect throughout the world. Did you know it was happening? If not for the efforts of the San Francisco Hepatitis Task Force, no one in my city would have known, myself included. Were it not for an email sent out by the task force recruiting volunteers for some boots on the ground outreach at transit stations in the city, it certainly would have passed me by. As it was about 50 hardy souls wore t-shirts, held up banners and handed out information cards during the morning and evening commute hours. Over 2500 cards were passed out during the day and thousands of other folks saw the signs and heard our pleas that they find out about HEP C and get tested. We tried out numerous catchphrases such as: “Do your liver a favor, get tested,” “Seven out of ten people don’t know they have it,” “We never thought we had it,” “If you have a tattoo, you might be infected.” “I never knew I had it,” etc. I irresponsibly came up with a few others such as “If you have a tattoo you are already dying,” “If I have it, so could you,” “Don’t die not knowing what killed you,” “What you don’t know can kill you,” and others. Anything to break through the iPod, cell phone and traffic noise clutter. It was a worthwhile though exhausting effort but it left me wondering why we don’t have better outreach about Hep C.

If you remember the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, the gay community did a fantastic job of organizing to demand research about the disease, research about a cure, better treatment by medical professionals, and fairer treatment for infected individuals. They had the same problem as the HEP C community in that AIDS was seen as a disease that affected mainly people who the mainstream of society saw as deviants. With AIDS the victims were defined as promiscuous, drug using men who engaged in “perverted” behavior. With HEP C victims are seen as drug using losers. (There is a rumor in San Francisco that the local Hepatitis B community decided not to ally with the HEP C community in a previous outreach program because they did not want their cause associated with drug use.) The AIDS community worked hard and eventually triumphed over that stigma (though suburban white folks starting to get the disease via contaminated blood certainly moved America toward the realization that the disease was not the wrath of god, but rather and dangerous virus). They now get vastly more attention than the HEP C community even though there are 4 times as many HEP C sufferers as people infected with HIV/AIDS. Our community of infected people needs to start becoming a lot more aggressive in publicizing HEP C and the fact that is one of a family of viruses that can infect people who have never used drugs or indeed engaged in any behaviors mainstream Americans look down upon.

We can certainly learn some lessons from the AIDS community and lose our apathy, shyness or indifference. It is the only way we are going to get the treatments for HEP C widely distributed at an affordable price so we can save the lives of people who don’t need to die from HEP C.

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