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PORTLAND – Health officials on Monday unveiled a statewide testing program for hepatitis C, which afflicts an estimated 15,000 Maine residents. The program also includes efforts to increase education about the blood-borne liver disease through free counseling, a state Bureau of Health Web site and…
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PORTLAND – Health officials on Monday unveiled a statewide testing program for hepatitis C, which afflicts an estimated 15,000 Maine residents.
The program also includes efforts to increase education about the blood-borne liver disease through free counseling, a state Bureau of Health Web site and radio and TV public service announcements.
Officials say that fewer than 10 percent of people with hepatitis C are aware that they have the disease.
The most common risk factors are sharing needles for drug use and having received a blood transfusion before 1992, when more effective blood screening tests became available.
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