WHO Handbook Accelerates Hepatitis Elimination Action
Summary
The World Health Organization (WHO) has released a new implementation handbook to support countries in accelerating action towards hepatitis elimination by 2030. The handbook consolidates evidence-based recommendations and provides practical guidance for expanding prevention, testing, and treatment services.
What changed
The World Health Organization (WHO) has published a comprehensive implementation handbook aimed at assisting countries in their efforts to eliminate viral hepatitis. This landmark document consolidates over a decade of WHO's evidence-based recommendations on hepatitis B, C, and D into a single, practical resource. It offers clear operational guidance for programme managers, policymakers, clinicians, donors, and partners to translate recommendations into action, supporting the integration of hepatitis services within primary healthcare and universal health coverage platforms. The handbook addresses prevention, testing, treatment, service delivery, and programme monitoring, emphasizing a public health approach to combatting the significant morbidity and mortality caused by viral hepatitis.
This guidance is intended for national health authorities and healthcare providers to enhance their hepatitis elimination strategies. It provides frameworks for scaling up equitable, person-centered hepatitis services, including prevention of mother-to-child transmission, vaccination, safe injection practices, and simplified treatment approaches. The handbook also supports the establishment of robust data monitoring systems to strengthen programme performance and accountability. While non-binding, it serves as a critical tool for countries working towards the 2030 global target for hepatitis elimination, highlighting the urgent need to accelerate progress given the substantial number of people living with hepatitis B and C and the high mortality rates associated with these diseases.
What to do next
- Review the WHO Consolidated guidance and implementation handbook on hepatitis B and C.
- Assess current national hepatitis programs against the handbook's recommendations.
- Develop or update national strategies to integrate hepatitis services within primary healthcare.
Source document (simplified)
© WHO/Zakarya Safari
Patient receives hepatitis treatment at the National Infectious Disease Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan © Credits
WHO launches first-ever implementation handbook to accelerate country action on hepatitis elimination
10 March 2026 Departmental update Reading time:
The World Health Organization (WHO) released landmark Consolidated guidance and implementation handbook on hepatitis B and C, to support countries to expand prevention, testing, treatment, service delivery and programme monitoring, through a comprehensive public health approach.
Marking 10 years since the adoption of WHO’s first Global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis, the handbook brings together more than a decade of WHO evidence-based recommendations on viral hepatitis into a single, practical reference for programme managers, policymakers, clinicians, donors and partners. It provides clear operational guidance in one place to translate normative recommendations into action. It also supports the integration of hepatitis services within primary health care and universal health coverage platforms.
Viral hepatitis remains a major health challenge. WHO estimates that 254 million people are living with hepatitis B and 50 million with hepatitis C. In 2022, hepatitis related cirrhosis and liver cancer caused 1.3 million deaths- equivalent to more than 3500 deaths each day - making hepatitis B and C among the leading infectious diseases worldwide with rising mortality This underscores the urgent need to take action now and accelerate progress towards the 2030 hepatitis elimination goal.
Despite the availability of highly effective tools for prevention, testing and treatment – including a cure for hepatitis C and a vaccine and effective treatment for hepatitis B – viral hepatitis continues to cause substantial preventable morbidity and mortality from liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular cancer.
“With this first-of-its-kind handbook, WHO is supporting countries to move from evidence-based recommendations to concrete action – reducing new hepatitis infections and combating rising mortality,” said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director of WHO’s Department for HIV, Tuberculosis, Hepatitis and Sexually Transmitted Infections. “The handbook provides clear implementation pathways to expand equitable, person-centred hepatitis services at all levels of the health system. It is an essential resource for strengthening national responses and achieving the 2030 global target of hepatitis elimination.”
The handbook:
- Consolidates more than 80 WHO evidence-informed recommendations on hepatitis B, C, and D (2015–2025) into a single, streamlined, modular resource.
- Provides practical guidance on prevention of mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis B, including hepatitis B birth dose vaccination, and other prevention interventions, such as blood and injection safety and harm reduction services for people who inject drugs.
- Outlines prioritized public health approaches to testing for hepatitis B, C and D, including the use of point-of-care and reflex testing, and provide guidance on simplified treatment approaches suitable for implementation across different levels of care.
- Emphasizes the central role of primary health care in national hepatitis responses and provides a framework for integrating hepatitis services within primary care settings.
- Supports the establishment of person-centered data monitoring systems and includes practical tools to strengthen programme performance and accountability. WHO is working with countries and partners to scale uptake of this new handbook to ensure equitable, integrated and person-centred hepatitis services and to accelerate progress towards elimination by 2030.
Related
Consolidated guidance on hepatitis B and C prevention, testing, treatment, service delivery and monitoring: an implementation handbook for a public health approach Technical information on hepatitis General information on hepatitis Fact sheets
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