Patient Information

What is Hepatitis C? 

Hepatitis C is caused by the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) and is the most common type of Viral Hepatitis in the UK. There are approximately 113,000 people in the UK who have Hepatitis C.

Hepatitis C is a blood borne virus that can infect the liver. If the virus is left untreated it can cause potentially serious, life threatening damage to the liver over time.

How do you become infected?

You can become infected with Hepatitis C if you come into contact with the blood of an infected person. Other bodily fluids can also contain the virus but blood contains the highest level of it. Just a small trace of blood can cause an infection. At room temperature, it is thought the virus may be able to survive outside the body in patches of dried blood on surfaces for up to several weeks.

What are the causes of Hepatitis C?

You can become infected with Hepatitis C through the following ways:

High Risk Causes
• Injecting Drugs: In the UK, Hepatitis C is commonly spread through sharing needles used to inject drugs.
• Blood transfusions before September 1991
• Blood transfusions and treatment abroad: Poor healthcare practices and unsafe medical injections are the main way Hepatitis C is spread outside the UK
• Unprotected Sex (particularly sex between men)
• Sharing toothbrushes, scissors and razors

Lower Risk Causes
• Tattooing and body piercing
• Mother to child
• Needle stick injury

How Hepatitis C Isn’t Spread

You cannot catch Hepatitis C from the following ways:
• Kissing
• Social contact such as hugging
• Sharing kitchen utensils
• Toilet seats

 

Tests for Hepatitis C

If you think you may have been exposed to Hepatitis C, taking a test will put your mind at rest. Even if the test is positive there are treatments available to start from within a few weeks of being tested. The services outlined below all offer testing for Hepatitis C:
• GP Surgeries
• Sexual Health Clinics
• Genitourinary Medicine (GUM) Clinics
• Drug and Alcohol Treatment Services

Treatment for Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C can often be treated successfully by taking medicines for eight to twelve weeks in most cases, the length of treatment will depend on the type of Hepatitis C you have. Hepatitis C is treated using Direct Acting Antiviral (DAA) tablets, DAA tablets are the safest and most effective medicines for treating Hepatitis C with more than 95% chance of cure.

How Can You Help?

• Make others aware of potential risk factors of getting Hepatitis C
• Do not treat people differently if they have the virus ‘not everyone acquires Hepatitis C through drug use’
• Signpost to testing who you think may have been exposed to risk
• Tell everyone treatment is tablet only which is accessed through specialist teams
• Take universal precautions if you come into contact with blood or equipment that maybe contaminated

Further Information

For further information, go to the useful links in this section or the useful links section on this website.

 

Public Health Information Videos

Hepatitis C Video for Needle Sharing