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DOH rolls out Hepatitis B testing nationwide

United States Health Epidemic Hepatitis A

(FILES) This file photo taken on August 27, 2013 shows a nurse loading a syringe with a vaccine against Hepatitis A at a free immunization clinic for students before the start of the school year, in Lynwood, California. A record epidemic of Hepatitis A, killed fourteen people and caused nearly 300 hospitalizations in San Diego since the beginning of 2017, particularly affecting homeless people and drug addicts. According to the latest figures from San Diego County, California, more than 350 cases have been reported, the majority since July, leading to the hospitalization of 264 people. / AFP PHOTO / ROBYN BECK / TO GO WITH AFP STORY, "Deadly hepatitis A epidemic in San Diego"

The Department of Health (DOH) has rolled out a nationwide testing program for Hepatitis B  to prevent the disease from further spreading among Filipino children.

DOH Secretary Francisco Duque III on Friday bared the agency’s National Hepatitis B Sero-prevalence Survey that would be conducted in 25 provinces across the country.

The project would have support from the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the World Health Organization (WHO), Duque said.

In the nationwide testing program, Duque said survey teams would go to randomly-selected households, and request for parents’ consent to participate in the activity.

“Around 3,000 children, aged five to six years old, will be tested for hepatitis B in the survey. DOH partnered with the Field Epidemiology Training Program Alumni Foundation, Inc., in deploying survey teams to 25 provinces,” Duque said in a statement.

“We appeal to parents or caregivers to allow their child, if he/she is selected, to be tested. Our survey teams have been trained to observe confidentiality in obtaining information,” the DOH chief stressed.

Duque, citing data from the WHO, said that around 8.5 Million Filipinos were chronically infected with the hepatitis B virus.

“However, the number of children affected by hepatitis B, an infectious liver disease, is unknown. Hepatitis B infection can lead to liver cirrhosis, liver cancer and premature death,” Duque said.

A small amount of blood will be drawn and tested for hepatitis B from the eligible child, he added.

“The concerted efforts of the community, along with its local government leaders, will ensure the successful conduct of the survey,” Duque stressed.   /vvp

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