JUNE 1 2019 LISTENER 27
Stars not infected, but prepared to front,
are fewer, but in 2015, the UK pop duo Right
Said Fred, who admitted using steroids in
the 1980s, publicly went and got tested for
hep C as part of a “I’m Not Too Sexy to Get
Tested” campaign in Britain. Both tested
negative.
But hepatitis C is not just a celebrity dis-
ease. Three years ago, I interviewed a group
of New Zealanders who had lived with the
virus. Most had been cured, either through
the punishing road of interferon or via anti-
viral drug trials administered by Gane.
“It was like having the Sword of Damocles
lifted,” a senior civil servant cured in one
of Gane’s trials told me. “For years, every
time I had an ache or pain, I would worry
that something was wrong, that liver cancer
had got me. I didn’t count on a future old
age or feel confident making those sorts of
plans. It was quite subtle, really, but once it
was gone, I was able to see how much the
disease had affected me.”
Understandably, few of those people were
willing to have their names published. A
successful campaign will need not only
people like them to brave the stigma, but
also people prepared to simply say in public
that they’re getting the test, just in case.
“If you could get one All Black ...” muses
Freeman. “Because they have this blood rule
on-field, it’s recognition that HIV, hep B and
hep C are spread by blood-to-blood contact.
We’d want them to say, ‘I’ve taken the test, I
don’t have hep C.’ And even if they do have
hep C, ‘I’ve taken the test, wait eight weeks,
I don’t have hep C any more.’ It doesn’t
matter, the answer will still be the same. So,
taking the test, there’s no risk. If you do have
hep C, we’ll cure you and we won’t run [the
ad in the media] for eight weeks!
“This afternoon, there are 10,000 New
Zealanders driving home from work going,
‘Oh, jeez, I’m feeling tired’, where it’s hep
C and they don’t know they’ve got it. And
you need to get to that group. You need to
be able to communicate with them, and go,
‘Guess what? You’ve got something, you
might not know it, but we can fix it, and
make you feel better.’ And that’s the key
message, because I’m not going to get hep
C-tested unless there’s some benefit for me.
And having this universal cure available,
free, means that, yeah, you got it, and eight
weeks later, no, you don’t.”
The undiagnosed group are “the lucki-
est people ever”, says Heal. “It’s incredible.
Walk in, find out, but as soon as they get
the bad news, they get the good news. It’s a
remarkable thing.”
Part of the reason for Australia’s high rate
of diagnosis, says Gane, is the years of work
put into awareness among risk groups by the
Australasian Society for HIV, Viral Hepatitis
and Sexual Health Medicine (ASHM).
By comparison, says Heal, “there really are
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“In New Zealand, we
think 40-50% of people
living with hepatitis C
are still undiagnosed.
You’re not going to cure
every one if they don’t
know they have hep C.
Dr Ed Gane: “We
need to get out
there and get
people tested.”