“Up to 70 per cent of injections are either totally unnecessary or could be replaced by oral medicines,” the WHO said in Geneva.
WHO expert Lisa Hedman has said at a press briefing that Egypt is one of the countries that have been affected by this problem.
“Injection equipment was reused on multiple people and created a spike in the transmission of hepatitis C that has been difficult to control ever since.
“As part of its campaign, WHO is asking health authorities to switch to equipment that cannot be used twice and that protects health workers from getting pricked.
“WHO also wants patients to know about the risks so that they can ask their doctor for a tablet instead of a shot.
According to the latest globally available WHO data, some 325 million people lived with chronic hepatitis in 2015.
WHO noted that some 1.3 million died of the liver disease that year.
Source:Premiumtimes