Hepatitis C New Zealand

June 2, 2010

New Zealand Hepatitis C Croydon Day Surgery

NZ Ministry of Health Press Release

2 June 2010

55 Women at Risk of Hep C being Traced

New Zealand and Australian health authorities are tracing 55 New Zealand women who visited a private medical clinic in Australia between 1 January 2006 and 7 December 2009 who may be at risk of having contracted Hepatitis C.

Ministry of Health Deputy Director of Public Health Dr Fran McGrath says Australian authorities identified the link between a cluster of hepatitis C cases and a private medical centre in the State of Victoria, Australia in April and are now investigating how this happened.

There is a police investigation in Victoria and media reports of legal action in Australia being planned.

“The Department of Health in Victoria, has taken responsibility for tracing, directly contacting and confidentially informing all 3,500 women concerned, including the 55 affected women giving a New Zealand address.”

The Department began contacting the New Zealanders yesterday as they worked through the 3500 women being traced. Around 1000 Australian women have been contacted and 746 tested.

Of those tested 44 have been found to have hepatitis C, around half of whom have had their infection linked to the private medical centre.

Because of the difficulties involved in tracing the women, the Ministry of Health will be working more closely with its Victorian counterpart in helping trace the New Zealand women concerned.

New Zealand women who had procedures at the Croydon Day Surgery in Croydon, Victoria from 1 January 2006 to 7 December 2009 can call Healthline in New Zealand and be transferred free of charge to a confidential Australian hepatitis line for further information.

“This is a sensitive and potentially distressing situation and the Ministry of Health here and health authorities in Australia are being careful to protect the privacy and confidentiality of the women involved”, Dr McGrath says.

Specialist staff in District Health Boards in New Zealand are on standby to offer blood testing, follow-up, support and treatment if necessary.

“Based on the results of women tested to date approximately 5% of women treated at the clinic may have contracted Hepatitis C. Based on this information we estimate that up to 3 New Zealand women may test positive.”

Any woman who has received treatment in a Melbourne private clinic in the four years from 2006 to 2009 should contact (New Zealand ) Healthline 0800 611 116 for advice.

Hepatitis C is a blood-borne virus that causes inflammation of the liver and which can have serious complications.

For more information contact Peter Abernethy, Media Relations Manager, 021 366 111

Further information can be found at the Victoria Department of Health website http://www.health.vic.gov.au/chiefhealthofficer/alerts/

Press release ends

Hepatitis C cases linked to doctor grows


AAP

The number of women infected with Hepatitis C after being treated by a Melbourne doctor has grown to 44 and is rising.

Another 32 women have tested positive to the infection after being treated by James Latham Peters, an anaesthetist at a Croydon abortion clinic, the Department of Human Services (DHS) revealed on Monday.

That number is certain to grow and the DHS has urged any women who have had abortions and been treated by Dr Peters at the Croydon Day Surgery to contact them.

The number of women infected with Hepatitis C after being treated by a Melbourne doctor has grown to 44 and is rising.

Another 32 women have tested positive to the infection after being treated by James Latham Peters, an anaesthetist at a Croydon abortion clinic, the Department of Human Services (DHS) revealed on Monday.

That number is certain to grow and the DHS has urged any women who have had abortions and been treated by Dr Peters at the Croydon Day Surgery to contact them.

More than 1100 women treated by Dr Peters since 2008 have been contacted by DHS and told to be tested, with the results of 746 women received showing 32 infection cases, Victoria’s chief health officer Dr John Carnie said.

Dr Carnie and police believe the doctor recklessly and maybe deliberately infected the women by using needles he had contaminated.

“The more cases you find in this instance, it becomes more and more difficult to explain this by any other accidental means,” Dr Carnie told reporters on Monday.

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/hepatitis-c-cases-linked-to-doctor-grows-20100531-wpuu.html

best of health

www.hcv.org.nz

March 8, 2010

Hepatitis C New Zealand Blog March 2010

Hepatitis C conference  Whakatane 2010

Past Failures and New Solutions in Hepatitis B and C control in New Zealand and the Asia Pacific region
Tariana Turia - NZ Viral Hepatitis Conference 2010

Tuatahi me mihi atu ki te mana whenua. Tena koutou o Mataatua waka. Tena hoki koutou o nga mata waka kua whakarauika nei i raro i te karanga o te ra

Tena koutou i runga i te rangimarie. Tena koutou i runga i nga maharatanga mo ratou kua wheturangitia.

No reira, tena tatou katoa

I want to thank the Hepatitis Foundation of New Zealand for the honour of being invited to open this third New Zealand Viral Hepatitis Conference.

I acknowledge the local people of this rohe, and I thank them for their generosity in hosting us here in Whakatane.

I extend a particular welcome to our international guests:

* Professor Mitchell Shiffman from the United States;
* Professor Andrew Lloyd from Australia;
* Dr Morris Sherman from Canada and
* Dr James Fung from Hong Kong.

While both Hepatitis B and C viruses are notifiable conditions under the Health Act, it is only cases of acute infection which require to be notified to the Medical Officer of Health.

Alongside with the lack of awareness that comes from being asymptomatic; people with hepatitis may experience stigma and discrimination which compounds the problems of living with the virus.

So the call to do better is an important one.

We must continue to raise awareness, leading to increased testing and diagnosis.
Well spoken words from Tariana Turia

Life after liver transplant

Hi, This is my first post of my Video Diary following my Liver Transplant and my continued fight against my Hepatitis C infection/virus. Just a quick one to saay hello - I’ve never done video before and so let’s hope for all our sakes that I get better at it soon!

Please check out my blog: http://www.ianquill.blogspot.com - Thanks for watching…. Ian Quill

Hepatitis C Drug Trails NZ March 2010

Four drug trials for Hepatitis C in New Zealand at the moment (March 2010)
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?term=hepatitis+c+New+zealand&recr=Open
1, TMC435-TiDP16-C206: A Safety and Efficacy Study in Chronic, Genotype 1, Hepatitis C Patients That Failed Previous Standard Treatment

2,  A Safety and Efficacy Study of the Combination of VX-222 and Telaprevir in Treatment-Naïve Subjects With Genotype 1 Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection

3, Safety and Tolerability Study of Clemizole Hydrochloride to Treat Hepatitis C in Subjects Who Are Treatment-Naive

4, Antiviral Activity of AZD7295 in HCV Carriers

Doctor  Magdalena Harris

thesis is available online now

Negotiating the pull of the normal: embodied narratives of living with hepatitis C in New Zealand and Australia (2010)
Harris, Magdalena , National Centre In HIV Social Research, Faculty Of Arts & Social Sciences, UNSW
My status as a person living with hepatitis C informed all aspects of this research project; I therefore also include my own experiences, foregrounding researcher reflexivity and the co-constructed nature of the interview process.

“ My aims are both practical and theoretical. On a practical level I explore the experiences of people living with hepatitis C in order to inform recommendations for policy, research and practice, while also working to elucidate and employ an approach that allows for an analysis of the ill body as a lived experiencing agent, located in a substantive web of connections whereby discourse, corporeality and sociality, inform and mediate one another. To this end I employ a “political phenomenology” influenced by phenomenological and poststructuralist theoretical approaches. The central, previously under-researched, issues that arose in participants’ narratives structure the chapter outline, with results chapters focusing on participants’ experiences of diagnosis, living with hepatitis C, stigma, support group membership, alcohol use, and hepatitis C treatment.

For many participants, it was found that living with hepatitis C was a liminal experience where distinctions between what it was to be healthy or ill were not clear-cut. Indeed, many of the participants’ narratives exposed the inadequacy of Western binary categorisations to speak to their experiences of living with hepatitis C. Throughout this thesis it can be seen that the meanings that participants ascribed to health, illness, and their hepatitis C were fluid and contextual, informed by the interplay of corporeality and discourse. From this interplay comes the ability to speak into the gaps of dominant discourses, creating the potential for the disruption, or subtle realignment, of normative ways of knowing. “
Download  your copy here
http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Repository/unsworks:7899

Congratulations  Dr Harris from all your peers.

The best of health
www.hcv.org.nz

June 23, 2009

Treatment responses Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C Treatment New Zealand District Health Boards

Ive been busy chasing District Health Boards to reply to our Hepatitis C treatment questions, Only three of the twenty one district health boards are yet to produce a reply and only one has ignored the request.

Treatment Outcomes and Terminology

There has been a bit of a discussion on the forums lately about monitoring treatment and the terminology
Rapid Viral Response: viral clearance at week four of treatment.
Early Viral Response (complete): viral clearance at week 12 of treatment.
Early Viral Response (partial): Significant drop in viral load at week 12 of treatment, ie. two log drop in viral load, eg. from 60,000 down to 600.
Non-Response: no significant drop in viral load after twelve weeks of treatment. This means you probably won’t be cured.
End-of-Treatment Response: whether or not the virus is detectable in your blood at the end of treatment (either six months or twelve months). This is good but it
doesn’t mean you are cured.
Sustained Viral Response: viral clearance as proved by a negative PCR result six months or more after treatment finishes. This is the result that people hope
for and is what doctors refer to when someone is successfully cured

http://www.hepc.org.au/documents/2009WYNTKweb-2MB.pdf

this info is from the new hep c council of NSW website  http://www.hepc.org.au/index.php?article=content/home

well worth a look.

Some Hepatitis C related video’s this blog


First up Teenager Jazzy was born with hepatitis C. This is her video diary about living with the condition
Produced and directed by Jazzy De Lisser “I will try treatment again”

A series of  informative videos from Nicole Cutler describes the various methods by which Hepatitis C is transmitted. www.hepatitis-central.com

Transmission

I  have been watching MusicKey ’s hepatitis C treatment Journey for a while now , GO MUSIC KEY  beat the virus

Another hepatitis C treatment video blog here

lots of encouragement to anyone on treatment and those contemplating it

best of health

www.hcv.org.nz

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