World Hepatitis Day 2017
World Hepatitis Day Videos
李易峰 Li Yifeng - World Hepatitis Day 2017
(Chinese version)
(Chinese version)
(English version)
Click HERE to see the Asian Liver Center's World Hepatitis Videos from previous years!
WHD with the World Health Organization
Visit the World Hepatitis Day website created by the World Health Organization HERE for more information about advocacy and awareness groups’ trail-blazing work, health care providers treatment and prevention comprehensive work, and national policy leader’s strategic activities.
WPR Infographics
Hepatitis- Know It. Treat It. Prevent It.
Treat Hepatitis- Stop Liver Cancer
Theme
The theme for this year’s global campaign is ELIMINATION. At the World Health Assembly in May, WHO Member States set to adopt the first ever Elimination Strategy for Viral Hepatitis, with ambitious targets and a goal to eliminate hepatitis as a public health threat by 2030. This will be the first time national governments sign up and commit to the goal of eliminating viral hepatitis.
For more information about World Hepatitis Day 2017, please visit the official World Hepatitis Day 2017 website.
Background
At the 63rd World Health Assembly in May 2010, the World Health Organization approved resolution WHA63.R18 that established World Hepatitis Day as an officially sanctioned hepatitis awareness day. World Hepatitis Day is an annual event that provides international focus for patient groups and people living with hepatitis B and C; it is an opportunity around which interested groups can build knowledge and influence real change in disease prevention and access to testing and treatment; and it provides an opportunity to raise public awareness about viral hepatitis and focus attention on what can effectively be done for its prevention and control.
The Western Pacific Region (WPRO) was the first of the six WHO regions to set a deadline for the reduction of hepatitis B infection rates in children through vaccination. The Region accounts for half of the world’s hepatitis B cases but is home to only a third of the world’s population.