WHO representative to India, Henk Bekedam, described "the administration of Hepatitis B dose within 24 hours of birth as a key challenge."
Hepatitis B is a contagious liver disease. If babies get infected, the virus usually remains in the body for a lifetime.
Bekedam said non-availability of Hepatitis B vaccine at all delivery points, lack of awareness amongst healthcare workers and private sector adopting a different policy for the birth dose vaccination are some of the challenges in India.
According to the WHO official, "The convergence of efforts between RMNCH+A (Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health) and the immunisation programme is necessary to improve birth dose coverage. India should set a national target of 90 per cent birth dose coverage by 2020."
Bekedam, however, described India reaching 86 per cent coverage of Hepatitis B third dose in 2015 as a "commendable" performance.
"In 2015, India reached 86 per cent coverage of Hepatitis B third dose which is commendable," he said.
Organisation (NACO) with evidence generation on Hepatitis C prevalence in various population groups nationwide, in order to provide more reliable estimates of the Hepatitis C disease burden, he stated.
"WHO is also supporting Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) with an injection safety project aiming to reduce demand for injections and increase the use of safety-engineered syringes for injections in health care settings.
"And as a part of this project in India, WHO is closely working with MoHFW and select state governments to take concrete steps for making injections safe, both in public and private sector," the WHO representative to India said.
In 2015, the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS) New Delhi was formally inaugurated as a WHO Collaborating Centre for Viral Hepatitis and Liver Diseases, he added.
Asked whether India's target towards becoming Hepatitis Free is an achievable target, Bekedam said, "Easy and affordable access to services and medicines for all people in need is the key to treatment and prevention of hepatitis infection.
"It is possible to significantly increase the number of people accessing treatment through a public health programme with standard screening and treatment strategies and guidelines as also affordable hepatitis C drugs. Drugs for hepatitis B and hepatitis C infections are already being manufactured in India," he said.
"Current challenges for hepatitis B control include the low hepatitis B birth dose coverage, injection safety issue and limited access to diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis infection," he stressed.
On how can the population prevalence of chronic HCV infection in India, which is around one per cent, be improved Bekedam said," Ensuring safe injection practice in India is the key to improve this situation.
"To reduce transmission (new infections) of hepatitis C in India, we need to make medical injections safe and treat people who have active infection. Hepatitis C can be cured and people who are cured do not transmit the virus anymore."
"Some state governments have negotiated prices for a 12 week treatment course at Rs 20,000-Rs 24,000. This is a much lower cost than in other countries.
"The price of same treatment in Egypt is USD 900. Prices can be negotiated further down if more people are put on treatment. The Punjab Government has been a flag bearer for Hepatitis C treatment in India.
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