Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jan 2005 Source: New York City Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2005 Newsday, Inc. Contact: http://cf.newsday.com/newsdayemail/email.cfm Website: http://www.nynewsday.com/news/printedition/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3362 Author: Delthia Ricks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) HEPATITIS C IS GROWING DANGER ON LONG ISLAND Popularity of Tattoos, Body Piercings Contribute to Problem Cases of hepatitis C are growing rapidly on Long Island -- and even faster in the city -- and health officials Tuesday said a lack of funding for surveillance and education could cause the number of infections to veer out of control. For the second time in less than two weeks, health experts in New York have warned of an epidemic of the blood-borne infection, which they say could rival the outbreak of HIV two decades ago. More than 11,000 cases of hepatitis C are now known on Long Island. The burgeoning number of cases in the city is worse -- between 200,000 and 300,000 -- and experts say there is no end to the upswing in sight. During a joint news conference, Nassau and Suffolk County health officials reported a growing wave of hepatitis C infections spawned by body piercings, tattooing from contaminated equipment and the popularity of crystal methamphetamine. Crystal meth, which first rose to popularity among long-haul truckers and in rural America, now is widely indulged in suburbs and cities. Health experts Tuesday called it the crack of the 21st century. "We have to identify people now," Nassau County Health Commissioner Dr. David Ackman said Tuesday during a news briefing at his Mineola offices. He said lack of money is hampering efforts to effectively cope with the virus. There is virtually no funding for case control, surveillance or education, the key areas through which public health systems curtail infectious diseases. Government funding, Ackman underscored, would be required to run the costly programs. Figures for 2004 show there were 4,364 cases of chronic hepatitis C in Nassau, but the number could be substantially higher, Ackman added, because of the infection's long latency, which can run a decade or more. A chronic case refers to one in which the virus already has triggered symptoms: jaundice, fatigue, generalized itching, nausea, vomiting and clay-colored stools. Chronic hepatitis C causes deadly liver inflammation, that without a transplant can lead to death. Unlike hepatitis A or B, there is no vaccine. There are treatments for controlling hepatitis C. Suffolk County Health Commissioner Dr. Brian Harper estimated the number of cases was even higher in his jurisdiction, where more than 7,000 cases of chronic hepatitis have been identified since 2001. He estimated cases are being reported at a rate of 200 per week. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) Tuesday proposed sweeping federal legislation during the news briefing, calling for a new Liver Research Advisory Board within the National Institutes of Health. "We have a crisis brewing here ... and what we want to avoid is another HIV-AIDS ," Schumer said. "We are seeing the same early signs." Schumer also called for vaccine development and a nationwide education program. He said a bipartisan coalition of federal legislators has proposed the Hepatitis Control and Prevention Act to stop a widespread epidemic before it starts. An estimated 2.7 million people are infected nationwide. Ackman said the newly recognized wave of infections is more prevalent in men because of the link to drug abuse. He and other experts Tuesday noted that hepatitis C, like some other blood-borne viruses, can be sexually transmitted. Additional routes of infection include shared intravenous needles and intranasal straws used to snort drugs. - ---