City
Epaper

Pakistan largest contributor to global number of people living with hepatitis C: Report

By IANS | Updated: May 1, 2026 19:30 IST

Islamabad, May 1 Pakistan is the single largest contributor to the global number of people living with hepatitis ...

Open in App

Islamabad, May 1 Pakistan is the single largest contributor to the global number of people living with hepatitis C, the World Health Organisation (WHO) Global Hepatitis Report 2026 has revealed. In addition, Pakistan has been named among the 10 nations which have most hepatitis C related deaths worldwide, sparking concerns over unsafe injections, reusable syringes and weak infection prevention measures in the country, local media reported.

According to the WHO report, hepatitis B and C are among the deadliest infections in the world despite being preventable and treatable while hepatitis C also being curable. As many as 287 million people were living in the world with chronic hepatitis B or C in 2024, including 240 million with hepatitis B and 47 million with hepatitis C, Pakistan's leading daily The News International reported.

As many as 1.34 million deaths occurred due to hepatitis B and C in 2024, including 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis B and 240,000 from hepatitis C, majority of them due to liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. The two infections account for more than 95 per cent of viral hepatitis related deaths around the world.

The WHO report stated that Pakistan “stands out clearly” as the single largest contributor to the global number of people with hepatitis C infection. The report connected the global hepatitis C burden to transmission, unsafe medical practices, injecting drug and gaps in diagnosis and treatment.

This is especially important in Pakistan's context as recent field reporting from various parts of the country found that banned reusable syringes and fake auto disable syringes were sold in the market, which experts stated can fuel transmission of hepatitis B, hepatitis C and HIV when used repeatedly by unqualified practitioners, News International reported. Health experts termed the findings a warning for Pakistan, where unnecessary injections remain common, quackery is widespread and infection prevention practices are poorly implemented in healthcare settings.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTrump to increase tariffs on EU cars to 25% next week, citing non-compliance from bloc

Other SportsIPL 2026: 'It is a total we can defend', says Jurel after RR post 225/6 vs DC

EntertainmentRussian director Pavel Talankin's missing Oscar statuette for 'Mr Nobody Against Putin' found

Other SportsManipur CM highlights state's globally renowned cultural and sporting legacy

Entertainment‘Hera Pheri’ producer Firoz Nadiadwala files complaint, alleges original producers sold the film’s rights twice

Health Realted Stories

HealthJ&K officials suspend licence of milk unit in Bijbehara over violations

HealthTwo more cases reported as Pakistan struggles to eradicate polio

Health6 new BIS standards for medical assistive tech to help policymakers, healthcare providers

Health1st BRICS women’s working group meet to advance women-led development: Govt

HealthIndia’s pharma rise driven by innovation push: Ex-US NIH Director