Hep C Discussion Forum

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Chatbox
Please log in to join the chat!
Post Info TOPIC: LA Times Grim News about HCV


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5629
Date:
LA Times Grim News about HCV
Permalink Closed


Isiscat2011 wrote:
LC wrote:

Yeah, I know I like reading grim news about HCV.


How about if I post some death statistics and tell a few F-0s that they must insist on tx now because it is a matter of their life or death.   Apparently that is good for the forum but confronting it is not.  smile

Does admin even care about the direction this forum has taken or are we not allowed to discuss that?  


 Isiscat...you know very well that the Admin team cares very much about what is happening to this forum, and that is a very unfair and unwarranted question.  And since you insist on bringing this out in the open I would also like to add that in all the time I`ve been involved with this forum I have never before seen such levels of confrontation and aggression.  Please remember that your opinions are not the only ones that count here. 

We hold back from interfering and censoring as much as possible in order to allow the free flow of discussions but you must remember that everyone here is entitled to express their feelings and views, even if you personally don`t agree with them. 

Harvoninme...I do agree that this topic wasn`t very appropriate for this forum, especially in the way it was presented.  Please bear that in mind with your future posts. 

I`m now closing this thread...yet again a discussion has been ruined because of personal agendas and aggressive attitudes.

Jill (Administrator)

 



__________________

Jill 

(71 yo, lives in UK)

Was Gen 3a, 

24wks Peg Ifn/Riba, Sep 2010 - Mch 2011

UND @ Wk.4, UND @ EOT, 

SVR Nov 2011 --> Still UND @ EOT + 4 yrs.

 

 

LC


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 473
Date:
Permalink Closed

The more people dying, the bigger the wallets the insurance fat-cats have to treat the rest of us.  So we need to get tested before we have ruined our livers, and  treatment comes too late to do us any good.  Makes good, good sense to me.  There is always a sunny-side, so I shall choose to look at this positively in the interest of peace and harmony.  smile



__________________

Genotype 1a, VL 1,151,923.  51 years old.  Started treatment on AbbVie TOPAZ II clinical trial Oct 10, 2014!  Undetected at weeks 2 and 4! 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1724
Date:
Permalink Closed

If  this thread was really started to discuss the positives of testing people for HCV it would not have been titled "Grim News."  This thread was about dying of HCV which is a new low for this forum.    

It was also about everyone getting Harvoni as soon as they want it because that is, once again, the thread's real agenda.  Just read the last line in the original post: 

"The health impact of advances in HCV therapy can be realized only when HCV-infected persons are tested, identified, and linked to appropriate care and treatment..."

What is really too bad is the personal agendas that have engulfed this forum.  Very sad.

 



__________________

Diagnosed in 2011, Incivek triple in 2011, tx discontinued, Genotype 1a, CT, VL 7mill, cirrhosis dx in 2012, age 67, waiting for new DAAs.

LC


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 473
Date:
Permalink Closed

Tess wrote:

The gist of the original message is that people born between 1945 and 1965 should be tested.  It could save 120,000 lives. 

I have been after a few of my loved ones in that age group to get tested.  Now I have some stats to give them. 

Too bad the thread went negative and the topic wasn't discussed.

Thanks for the info.

- Tess


So the topic of the article linked is - Fewer Americans are living with hepatitis C, because more have died.  Maybe we should go ahead and discuss the positives of this worthwhile topic that so no one is diappointed.  So what does that mean to us still living?   I guess that means more Harvoni for the rest of us then doesn't it?  wink



-- Edited by LC on Tuesday 2nd of December 2014 07:18:07 AM

__________________

Genotype 1a, VL 1,151,923.  51 years old.  Started treatment on AbbVie TOPAZ II clinical trial Oct 10, 2014!  Undetected at weeks 2 and 4! 



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 151
Date:
Permalink Closed

The gist of the original message is that people born between 1945 and 1965 should be tested.  It could save 120,000 lives. 

I have been after a few of my loved ones in that age group to get tested.  Now I have some stats to give them. 

Too bad the thread went negative and the topic wasn't discussed.

Thanks for the info.

- Tess



__________________

HCV Gen 1a diagnosed 2001; Labs 11/13/14: VL 1.2 million IU/mL, ast 88, alt 111. Harvoni TX 12 weeks.  EOT - 2/18/15, VL UND & normal ast/alt.

4 wks after EOT, VL = UND; normal AST/ALT at 4, 8 and 14 weeks after EOT.  15 weeks after EOT = Undetectable!



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 122
Date:
Permalink Closed

Sheesh why does everything have to turn into a fight. Maybe they should open a thread, give everyone boxing gloves and let them duke it out. Get everything out of their systems. Then maybe it can turn back into support and information.

__________________

64 yo Diagnosed in 1991 with Hep C, Genotype 1a, VL close to 16,000,000, Tx Abbvie Topaz II 9/5/14, Wk 2 and 4 und. End of treatment 11/27/14 undetected.  EOT+4 und  EOT+12 und.  EOT+24 und CURED, EOT +52 now I feel really cured.



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1724
Date:
Permalink Closed

LC wrote:

Yeah, I know I like reading grim news about HCV.


How about if I post some death statistics and tell a few F-0s that they must insist on tx now because it is a matter of their life or death.   Apparently that is good for the forum but confronting it is not.  smile

Does admin even care about the direction this forum has taken or are we not allowed to discuss that?  



__________________

Diagnosed in 2011, Incivek triple in 2011, tx discontinued, Genotype 1a, CT, VL 7mill, cirrhosis dx in 2012, age 67, waiting for new DAAs.

LC


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 473
Date:
Permalink Closed

Yeah, I know I like reading grim news about HCV.

__________________

Genotype 1a, VL 1,151,923.  51 years old.  Started treatment on AbbVie TOPAZ II clinical trial Oct 10, 2014!  Undetected at weeks 2 and 4! 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3398
Date:
Permalink Closed

Guys,

What's happened to the Forum while I've been away.

I see a lot of sniping, sarcasm and belittling.

Please keep it civil.



__________________

Geno 1b, IL28B CT,  x3 prior relapser,  ex-cirrhotic, 75 yo, did 48 weeks with Victrelis/Peg./Riba.  VL 1.28m at start, UNDET. at 8 ,12 ,16 ,24 ,30  and 48 weeks.  EOT 15 Feb 2013 , UNDET. at EOT + 28 weeks. SVR!  Still Undet. at EOT +5 years

Malcolm



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 940
Date:
Permalink Closed

Isiscat2011 wrote:

Nice. 

The cirrhotics here already know HCV can kill them (but thanks for reminding all of us).  

Clearly you intended to frighten someone other than those with advanced liver disease with this but I'm sure you know very well that they are not at risk of dying from HCV.


 This confrontational style is not consistent with the standards we strive to uphold on this forum, and will not continue.

The Admin Team



__________________

"hrsetrdr"=Tim

Treatment halted on Aug.8,2012 due to vision problem.  6 month post tx labs

Aug.2013 SVR

Be strong when you are weak, brave when you are scared, and humble when you are victorious.
- Unknown

 

 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3398
Date:
Permalink Closed

Harvoninme wrote:

Interesting sniptistics from the article:

"Overall, 81% of all people with chronic hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1965. This is why the CDC recommends that all people born during that window get tested at least once. Such screening would flag about 800,000 people who otherwise wouldnt know they were infected; if all of them got treatment, an estimated 120,000 deaths due to HCV could be avoided, the researchers wrote.

The health impact of advances in HCV therapy can be realized only when HCV-infected persons are tested, identified, and linked to appropriate care and treatment, they wrote."


This does not surprise me. My generation mostly didn't do drugs. Alcohol was all we wanted. Pot, cocaine, heroin were not readily available when we were 18-25 y.o.'s.

You can look at all the surveys but probably 80% of HCV cases came from IV drug use. Tainted blood and blood products, vaccination air guns, tattoos etc. probably accounted for another 10%. The remaining 10% will never know where their HCV came from.

Most new cases today would be from IV drug use, IMHO. Cheers.



__________________

Geno 1b, IL28B CT,  x3 prior relapser,  ex-cirrhotic, 75 yo, did 48 weeks with Victrelis/Peg./Riba.  VL 1.28m at start, UNDET. at 8 ,12 ,16 ,24 ,30  and 48 weeks.  EOT 15 Feb 2013 , UNDET. at EOT + 28 weeks. SVR!  Still Undet. at EOT +5 years

Malcolm



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1724
Date:
Permalink Closed

Harvoninme wrote:

I find this interesting: 81% of all people with chronic hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1965

Are there really that many fewer folks engaging in high risk activities  now? What about tatts?  Has AIDs education curtailed the spread? Was the blood supply a bit more tainted than the powers that be care to admit? Or is that demographic just the largest at this time?

  


The powers that be are now admitting that half of the HCV infections did not come from drug activity.  I recall when that number was much smaller, and I expect it will become smaller still as the need to stigmatize HCV dissipates, with the availability of good tx.  

HCV was spread through the medical and military industries before people were aware of it.  Now both take better precautions.  Nowadays IV drug use is the most likely avenue for transmission (estimated 75% of all new cases) because the previous methods of infection have been cleaned up.  We see pockets where patients are exposed--like that Vegas dentist who went to prison--but health care workers and the military take more appropriate precautions now.   Tatts are still a significant method of transmission in the prison population but most tattoo parlors are well aware of the risks.

I would think there are just as many or more people using IV drugs now as ever but I haven't studied the stats.



__________________

Diagnosed in 2011, Incivek triple in 2011, tx discontinued, Genotype 1a, CT, VL 7mill, cirrhosis dx in 2012, age 67, waiting for new DAAs.



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 140
Date:
Permalink Closed

I find this interesting: 81% of all people with chronic hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1965

Are there really that many fewer folks engaging in high risk activities  now? What about tatts?  Has AIDs education curtailed the spread? Was the blood supply a bit more tainted than the powers that be care to admit? Or is that demographic just the largest at this time?

 

 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1724
Date:
Permalink Closed

Nice. 

The cirrhotics here already know HCV can kill them (but thanks for reminding all of us).  

Clearly you intended to frighten someone other than those with advanced liver disease with this but I'm sure you know very well that they are not at risk of dying from HCV.



__________________

Diagnosed in 2011, Incivek triple in 2011, tx discontinued, Genotype 1a, CT, VL 7mill, cirrhosis dx in 2012, age 67, waiting for new DAAs.



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 140
Date:
Permalink Closed

Interesting sniptistics from the article:

"Overall, 81% of all people with chronic hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1965. This is why the CDC recommends that all people born during that window get tested at least once. Such screening would flag about 800,000 people who otherwise wouldnt know they were infected; if all of them got treatment, an estimated 120,000 deaths due to HCV could be avoided, the researchers wrote.

The health impact of advances in HCV therapy can be realized only when HCV-infected persons are tested, identified, and linked to appropriate care and treatment, they wrote."



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Legal Disclaimer:

THIS FORUM, IT'S OWNERS, ADMINISTRATORS, MODERATORS AND MEMBERS DO NOT AT ANY TIME GIVE MEDICAL ADVICE AND IN ALL CASES REFER ANYONE HERE TO SEEK APPROPRIATE MEDICAL ADVICE FROM THEIR DOCTOR.