• Text Resize A A A
  • Print Print
  • Share Share on facebook Share on twitter Share

Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan for the United States: A Roadmap to Elimination 2021–2025 Toolkit

Eliminating viral hepatitis as a public health threat requires action from all parts of society—federal, state, tribal, and local governments; nongovernmental organizations such as health care providers, health systems, payers, community- and faith-based organizations, academic institutions; and advocates, patients, and their families.

The resources below can help you share information about the Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan and its aim to eliminate viral hepatitis as a public health threat in the United States by 2030. We encourage you to use the resources below to enhance your communications materials in social media, emails, newsletters, presentations, flyers, etc as you engage others in this important effort. Help spread the call to action!

Social Media Graphics


Sample Email/Newsletter Copy

Day of Email

Subject Line: HHS Releases National Strategic Plan to Eliminate Viral Hepatitis as a Public Health Threat

Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a new national strategic plan to address the serious, preventable public health threat caused by viral hepatitis in the United States.

The Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan for the United States: A Roadmap to Elimination 2021–2025 (Viral Hepatitis Plan) sets forth a clear vision for a nationwide response to eliminate this public health threat:

The United States will be a place where new viral hepatitis infections are prevented, every person knows their status, and every person with viral hepatitis has high-quality health care and treatment and lives free from stigma and discrimination.

This vision includes all people, regardless of age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, religion, disability, geographic location, or socioeconomic circumstance.

The Viral Hepatitis Plan also provides goal-oriented objectives and strategies and serves as a roadmap that can be implemented by a broad mix of stakeholders at all levels and across many sectors, both public and private, to guide development of policies, initiatives, and actions for viral hepatitis prevention, screening, and treatment. It is an elimination plan, with the overarching goal of eliminating hepatitis as a public health threat in the United States by 2030.

For more information on the Viral Hepatitis Plan, visit https://www.hhs.gov/hepatitis/index.html. For more information on viral hepatitis, visit https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/index.htm.

Post Release Email

Subject Line: New National Strategic Plan Offers Roadmap to Eliminate the Viral Hepatitis Epidemics

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently released a new national plan to address the serious, preventable public health threat caused by viral hepatitis in the United States.

The Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan for the United States: A Roadmap to Elimination 2021–2025 (Viral Hepatitis Plan) sets forth a clear vision for a nationwide response to this public health threat:

The United States will be a place where new viral hepatitis infections are prevented, every person knows their status, and every person with viral hepatitis has high-quality health care and treatment and lives free from stigma and discrimination.

This vision includes all people, regardless of age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, religion, disability, geographic location, or socioeconomic circumstance.

The Viral Hepatitis Plan also provides goal-oriented objectives and strategies and serves as a roadmap that can be implemented by a broad mix of stakeholders at all levels and across many sectors, both public and private, to guide development of policies, initiatives, and actions for viral hepatitis prevention, screening, and treatment. It is an elimination plan, with the overarching goal of eliminating hepatitis as a public health threat in the United States by 2030.

For more information on the Viral Hepatitis Plan, visit https://www.hhs.gov/hepatitis/index.html. For more information on viral hepatitis, visit https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/index.htm.

Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan 2021–2025 (Viral Hepatitis Plan) Key Messages

  • Viral hepatitis is a serious, preventable public health threat that puts people who are infected at increased risk for liver disease, cancer, and death, contributes to substantial health disparities, stigma, and discrimination, and collectively costs people, health systems, states, and the federal government billions of dollars each year.
  • The Viral Hepatitis National Strategic Plan for the United States: A Roadmap to Elimination 2021–2025 (Viral Hepatitis Plan or Plan) covers the most common types of viral hepatitis: hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C—the hepatitis viruses that most significantly impact the health of the nation. The Plan provides a framework to control the viral hepatitis epidemics and eliminate viral hepatitis as a public health threat in the United States by 2030.
  • Elimination is defined in the Plan and by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a 90% reduction in new chronic infections and a 65% reduction in mortality, compared to a 2015 baseline, although the Plan uses 2017 data as a baseline.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan is designed to facilitate a whole-person health perspective and whole-of-nation response to the hepatitis epidemics in the United States and to successfully eliminate viral hepatitis as a public health threat by 2030.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan lays out a clear vision for how the United States will be a place where new viral hepatitis infections are prevented, every person knows their status, and every person with viral hepatitis has high-quality health care and treatment and lives free from stigma and discrimination.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan provides goal-oriented objectives and strategies and serves as a roadmap that can be implemented by a broad mix of stakeholders at all levels and across many sectors, both public and private, to guide development of policies, initiatives, and actions for viral hepatitis prevention, screening, and treatment. Its vision is accompanied by the following five high-level goals, which frame the Plan’s more specific objectives:
    • Goal 1: Prevent new viral hepatitis infections
    • Goal 2: Improve viral hepatitis-related health outcomes of people with viral hepatitis
    • Goal 3: Reduce viral hepatitis-related disparities and health inequities
    • Goal 4: Improve viral hepatitis surveillance and data use
    • Goal 5: Achieve integrated, coordinated efforts that address the viral hepatitis epidemics among all partners and stakeholders.
  • Each of the goal areas present evidence-based strategies, for stakeholders to use, that are most likely to contribute toward achieving national goals to eliminate the public health threat of viral hepatitis.
  • The Plan identifies disproportionately impacted populations with higher rates of viral hepatitis incidence, prevalence, and mortality (i.e., priority populations) based on national surveillance data, so that federal agencies and other stakeholders can focus their resources to realize the greatest impact. This approach should not diminish efforts to increase awareness, prevention, treatment, and integration of viral hepatitis efforts more generally, for all populations. Stakeholders are encouraged to use the data for the populations and communities they serve to help focus their own efforts for the greatest impact.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan emphasizes viral hepatitis as part of a syndemic, which occurs when health-related problems—such as viral hepatitis, HIV, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and substance use disorders (SUDs) —cluster by person, place, or time and interact synergistically. The syndemic also includes social determinants of health, stigma, discrimination, and mental health. This complex, multifactorial environment must be addressed to eliminate viral hepatitis in the United States.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan, the HIV National Strategic Plan: A Roadmap to End the Epidemic (2021–2025), the first-ever Sexually Transmitted Infections National Strategic Plan (2021–2025), and Healthy People 2030 (whose targets will be updated to reflect these national strategic plans) are all aligned.
  • An integrated approach to viral hepatitis and the related public health challenges of the syndemic will reduce fragmented care and ultimately reduce viral hepatitis infection rates. The Plan provides a roadmap to integrate prevention, screening, and linkage to care for all components of the syndemic, so that we can meet people where they are with no wrong point of entry to health care and related systems.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan recognizes the importance of addressing social determinants of health to improve health outcomes for racial, ethnic, and sexual and gender minority populations. By working to establish policies and programs that positively influence social and economic conditions and by supporting changes in individual behavior, health can be improved and sustained, and disparities reduced.
  • Reversing the rates of viral hepatitis, preventing new infections, and improving care and treatment require a strategic and coordinated approach by federal partners in collaboration with state and local health departments, tribal communities, community-based organizations, and other nonfederal partners and stakeholders.
  • State, tribal, territorial, and local jurisdictions, as well as health care providers, health plans, community-based and faith-based organizations, advocacy groups, and other institutions should review data that pertain to the populations and communities they serve. This review will help each stakeholder determine how best to focus efforts and resources to achieve results with the highest impact.
  • The Viral Hepatitis Plan was developed through a robust process that included gathering feedback from stakeholders across health care and related fields. Partners throughout the federal government, as well as input from hundreds of nonfederal stakeholders including state, tribal, territorial, and local governments, researchers, health plans and providers, community groups, and national and local organizations that work in viral hepatitis and related fields, have helped shape the goals, objectives, and strategies in this plan.

Find more messages regarding the Viral Hepatitis Plan.

Additional Resources

Guidelines and Best Practices

Press Release

Newsletter

Content created by Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy (OIDP)
Content last reviewed on January 8, 2021