Ongoing Viral Hepatitis Outbreaks: Systemic Interventions

Viral Hepatitis outbreaks, namely Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B, have been in the news quite a bit during the last year. Could COVID-19 have contributed to them?

Annual surveillance data for the state of Florida found the 2017 Hepatitis A outbreak has shifted location from primarily South Florida to the Pensacola area, in Escambia County. Florida isn’t alone with persistent Hepatitis A outbreaks. According to the CDC’s Hepatitis A outbreak dashboard, as of February 5, 2021, almost 40,000 cases of Hepatitis A have been confirmed related to the outbreak beginning in 2017, with more than 25 states still in an active outbreak status. Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, and West Virginia top the list for the most cases reported since the outbreak began.

These outbreaks are primarily attributed to an increase in homeless populations and populations experiencing housing instability and lack of access to sanitary conditions. Hepatitis A is primarily transmitted in close-contact settings by way of ingesting blood or stool particles from a person carrying the disease. While the disease is not always deadly, it can be. Indeed, the 2017 multi-state outbreak has resulted in at least 354 deaths, according to the CDC.

Additionally, in late 2020, Vermont reported outbreaks of Hepatitis A and B, with Vermont Health Commissioner, Dr. Mark levin, said the state had been anticipating an eventual outbreak because of existing outbreaks in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Hepatitis B, much like Hepatitis C, is often attributed to injection drug use, long-term health care settings, and contact with bodily fluids containing the virus, including blood and semen.

In response to these outbreaks, the CDC has encouraged states to engage in more active community education and vaccination programs. Both Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B are preventable and post-exposure vaccine administration may be appropriate in some situations. However, as the COVID-19 pandemic has reminded us, other interventions are necessary to address both risk factors to infectious diseases and reduce barriers to care. Addressing the nation’s housing and homelessness crisis could potentially provide one, extraordinarily significant structural intervention to address these and other public health crises.

President Joe Biden made campaign promises relating to need for more equitable housing policies and expanding affordable housing to address social justice needs as well as health-related needs and is already working to establish a fairer housing environment for the country. From extending the eviction moratorium to ensuring housing protections are extended to all Americans regardless of sexual identity or gender orientation (a reversal of the previous Administration’s policies), first steps are already being laid in order to meet well-known housing needs. And none too soon, as we don’t yet have a full picture of exactly how the COVID-19 caused economic recession will impact rates of homelessness, but one study issued a rather dire warning last month, saying this recession would likely cause double the rate of homelessness than the 2008 crisis.

From Hepatitis A and B to COVID-19 and the Opioid Crisis, housing has become (always was) a preeminent intervention that remains largely inadequately addressed. Federal funding and state programming must move to invest in housing as a prevention strategy in order to get ahead of these outbreaks and stop the chains of transmission. Housing is not just a human necessity; it is a public health necessity and must be embraced with the vigor the moment demands.

For the most up-to-date information from the National ADAP Working Group (NAWG), Hepatitis Advocacy, Education, and Leadership blog, and the quarterly HIV-HCV Co-infection Watch Report, sign up for our listserv here.

Jen Laws, President & CEO

Jen Laws (Pronouns: He/Him/His) is the President & Founder of Policy Candy, LLC, which is a non-partisan health policy analysis firm specializing in various aspects of health care and public health policy, focusing on the needs of the HIV-affected and Transgender communities. In that capacity, Jen has served as the President & CEO of the Community Access National Network (CANN), beginning in January 2022. He previously served as the Project Director of CANN's HIV/HCV Co-Infection Watch, as well as 340B Policy Consultant.

Jen began his advocacy efforts in Philadelphia in 2005, at the age of 19, coordinating team efforts for a corporation participating in the AIDS Walk. His connection to HIV advocacy grew when partnering with Mr. Friendly, a leading anti-HIV-stigma campaign.

He began working in public health policy in 2013, as a subcontractor for Broward Regional Planning Council evaluating Marketplace plans for plan year 2014, advising and educating constituents on plan selection. Jen was a member of South Florida AIDS Network and has worked with Florida Department of Health, Broward and Miami-Dade County Health Departments, Pride Center South Florida, and other local organizations to South Florida in addressing the concerns and needs of these intersecting communities. During this time, Jen was seated on the board of directors for the ADAP Advocacy Association.

Having moved to the New Orleans area in 2019, Jen resumed his community-based advocacy as the chair of Louisiana's Ending the HIV Epidemic planning subcommittee for Data-based Policy and Advocacy, regular participation as a community member and "do-gooder" with other governmental and non-governmental planning bodies across the Louisiana, and engages with other southern state planning bodies. He continues his advocacy in governmental health care policy evaluation, which has been utilized to expand access to quality healthcare by working with RAD Remedy to deliver the nation's foremost database of trans* competent health care providers. Lending his expertise on policy matters ranging from 340B impact on RW providers and patients to strategic communications and data analysis, Jen's approach to community engagement is focused on being accessible across all stakeholder groups and centering the perspectives of PLWHA and Transgender people. He is a community ambassador alumni of the CDC's Let's Stop HIV Together campaign.

In his personal life, Jen enjoys spending his time being "ridiculously wholesome" with his partner, Aisha, and her two amazing daughters. In their personal time, when not immersed in crafts or house projects, they can be found seeking opportunities to help their neighbors, friends, and community members (who have come to rightfully expect exquisite gift baskets of Aisha's homemade jams and jellies from time to time). Jen strives to set a good example both in his personal professional life of integrating values into action and extending the kindness and care that have led him to a life he calls "extraordinarily lucky".

https://tiicann.org
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The Future is Now: Welcome to the Age of Injectables