Abstract
The National Institutes of Health and other institutions have emphasized the need
to expand access to treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection to a larger and
more diverse patient population. To begin to address this need, the divisions of General
Internal Medicine and Liver Diseases of the Mount Sinai Medical Center created a program
to identify patients who might benefit from hepatitis C treatment, to treat uncomplicated
patients in the primary care setting, and to refer appropriate patients to liver disease
specialists. Preliminary data from this program suggest that primary care-based treatment
of chronic hepatitis C may offer unique advantages. The primary care setting allows
special needs to be addressed and allows comprehensive services to be provided. Patients
are guided through the complex pretreatment evaluation process, and non-liver-related
comorbidities are managed. Our program may provide a useful model for increasing hepatitis
C literacy among primary care providers and for extending treatment to a broader population
of patients with hepatitis C.
KEYWORDS
Access - comorbidity - hepatitis C - risk factor - treatment - primary care
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Thomas G McGinnM.D. M.P.H.
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Box 1087, 1470 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10029-6574
eMail: thomas.mcginn@mountsinai.org