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Hepatitis Gains Made, 2030 Targets Need Acceleration

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Summary

The 2026 Global Hepatitis Report documents measurable progress since 2015: hepatitis B new infections dropped 32% globally, hepatitis C deaths fell 12%, and 85 countries have achieved or surpassed the 2030 target of 0.1% hepatitis B prevalence in children under five. However, 287 million people were living with chronic hepatitis B or C in 2024, with only 5% of hepatitis B patients receiving treatment and just 20% of hepatitis C patients treated since 2015. The WHO Director-General noted that while elimination is achievable with sustained political commitment, urgent scale-up of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment is needed to meet 2030 targets.

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The WHO Global Hepatitis Report 2026 presents updated epidemiological data showing measurable gains in hepatitis elimination efforts since 2015, including a 32% reduction in new hepatitis B infections and a 12% decline in hepatitis C deaths worldwide. Despite these gains, the report emphasizes that current rates are insufficient: only 5% of the 240 million people with chronic hepatitis B are receiving treatment, and only 20% of hepatitis C patients have been treated since curative 12-week therapies became available.

Healthcare providers and public health authorities should note the geographic disparities highlighted: the WHO African Region accounts for 68% of new hepatitis B infections yet only 17% of newborns receive the birth-dose vaccination, and people who inject drugs represent 44% of new hepatitis C infections. These data points may inform program prioritization and resource allocation for hepatitis elimination initiatives.

Archived snapshot

Apr 28, 2026

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© WHO / Faizza Tanggol
Nurse Josephine administers routine immunization to baby Ana, who is being carried by her mother, Faimanifo, at the Lufilufi Health Centre in Samoa. © Credits

Efforts to eliminate hepatitis delivers gains but more action needed to meet 2030 targets

28 April 2026 News release Bangkok/Geneva Reading time:
Global efforts to combat viral hepatitis are delivering measurable progress in reducing infections and deaths, but the disease remains a major global health challenge, according to a new World Health Organization (WHO) report released today at the World Hepatitis Summit.

Viral hepatitis B and C – the two infections responsible for 95% of hepatitis-related deaths worldwide – claimed 1.34 million lives in 2024, the latest data show. At the same time, transmission continues, with more than 4900 new infections every day, or 1.8 million each year.

The 2026 Global hepatitis report documents significant gains made since 2015. The annual number of new hepatitis B infections has dropped by 32% and hepatitis C-related deaths have fallen by 12% globally. Hepatitis B prevalence among children under five has also decreased to 0.6%, with 85 countries achieving or surpassing the 2030 target of 0.1%.

These achievements reflect the impact of sustained, coordinated global and national action following the adoption of WHO viral hepatitis elimination targets by Member States at the World Health Assembly in 2016. However, the report warns that current rates of progress are insufficient to meet all 2030 elimination targets, underscoring the urgent need to accelerate prevention, testing, and treatment efforts worldwide.

“Around the world, countries are showing that eliminating hepatitis is not a pipedream, it's possible with sustained political commitment, backed by reliable domestic financing,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “At the same time, this report shows that progress is too slow and uneven. Many people remain undiagnosed and untreated due to stigma, weak health systems and inequitable access to care. While we have the tools to eliminate hepatitis as a public health threat, urgent scale-up of prevention, diagnosis and treatment is needed if the world is to meet the 2030 targets.”

Global burden and gaps in response

Updated WHO estimates indicate that 287 million people were living with chronic hepatitis B or C infection in 2024.

That year, 0.9 million people were newly infected with hepatitis B. The WHO African Region accounted for 68% of new hepatitis B infections, yet only 17% of newborns in the region received the hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination.

A further 0.9 million hepatitis C infections were recorded in 2024. People who inject drugs accounted for 44% of new infections, highlighting the urgent need for stronger harm reduction services and safe injection practices.

Of the 240 million people with chronic hepatitis B in 2024, fewer than 5% were receiving treatment. Only 20% of people with hepatitis C have been treated since 2015, when a new 12-week treatment with a cure rate of about 95% became available.

As a result of limited access to prevention and care, in 2024 an estimated 1.1 million people died from hepatitis B and 240 000 from hepatitis C. Liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma were the main causes of hepatitis related deaths. A large share of hepatitis B-related deaths occurred in the African and Western Pacific Regions.

Ten countries – Bangladesh, China, Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, the Philippines, South Africa and Viet Nam – accounted for 69% of hepatitis B related deaths worldwide in 2024. Hepatitis C-related deaths are more geographically dispersed. In 2024, ten countries accounted for 58% of the global total: China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Russian Federation, South Africa, the United States of America and Viet Nam.

Proven solutions

Despite these challenges, progress in countries such as Egypt, Georgia, Rwanda, and the United Kingdom demonstrates that eliminating hepatitis as a public health problem is achievable with sustained commitment and investment.

Highly effective tools are already available:

  • hepatitis B vaccine protects more than 95% of vaccinated people against both acute and chronic infections;
  • long-term antiviral treatment for hepatitis B can help effectively manage chronic infection and prevent severe liver disease; and
  • hepatitis C short-course curative therapy lasting 8-12 weeks can cure more than 95% of infections. “The data shows that progress is possible but also reveals where we are falling short. Every missed diagnosis and untreated infection due to chronic viral hepatitis represents a preventable death,” said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director, WHO Department for HIV, TB, Hepatitis and Sexually Transmitted Infections. “Countries must move faster to integrate hepatitis services for people living with hepatitis B and C into primary care, and to reach the communities most affected.”

The report identifies priority actions to accelerate hepatis elimination as a public health threat. These include scaling up treatment for chronic hepatitis B infection, particularly in the WHO African and Western Pacific regions, and expanding access to hepatitis C treatment in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region.

It also calls for stronger political commitment and financing, improved coverage of hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination and expanded antiviral prophylaxis to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HBV infection, particularly in the WHO African Region. In addition, the report emphasizes the need to improve injection safety in both health-care settings and community practices, including through strengthened harm reduction services for people who inject drugs.

Media Contacts

WHO Media Team

World Health Organization

Email: mediainquiries@who.int Related

Global hepatitis report 2026 World Hepatitis Summit WHO's work on hepatitis News

WHO launches first-ever implementation handbook to accelerate country action on hepatitis elimination 10 March 2026 WHO urges action on hepatitis, announcing hepatitis D as carcinogenic 28 July 2025 Fact sheets

Hepatitis A 12 February 2025 Hepatitis B 23 July 2025 Hepatitis C 25 July 2025 Hepatitis D 25 July 2025 Hepatitis E 10 April 2025

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Classification

Agency
WHO
Published
April 28th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Public health authorities Healthcare providers Government agencies
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Disease prevention Public health reporting Vaccination programs

Taxonomy

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Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Pharmaceuticals Healthcare

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