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Hepatitis C Testing & Treatment |
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Back to Digestive Health Allen Digestive Health Offers Hepatitis C Testing, Diagnosis, Treatment Hepatitis C is a silent disease. It slowly
destroys the liver, decades before symptoms appear. If you’re a baby
boomer, born between 1945 and 1965, the Center for Disease Control
recommends a one-time test for hepatitis C now. Baby boomers may have
contracted the disease before routine screening of donated blood and
organs was standard, or risks of sharing IV needles were well-known. The Allen Digestive Health Center tests, diagnoses and treats hepatitis
C. The sooner you test, the better we can treat you and prevent
complications. Ask your doctor to schedule your hepatitis C test with
us, or call 319-234-5990. Click here to learn about our healthcare providers. Click here to find a location near you. | |  |
Who is at risk for Hepatitis C? 
| | Some people are at increased risk for Hepatitis C, including: - People who received body piercing or tattoos done with non-sterile instruments (Click here for more info)
- Current injection drug users (currently the most common way Hepatitis C virus is spread in the United States)
- Past injection drug users, including those who injected only one time or many years ago
- Recipients of donated blood, blood products, and organs (once a common means of transmission but now rare in the United States since blood screening became available in 1992)
- People who received a blood product for clotting problems made before 1987
- Hemodialysis patients or persons who spent many years on dialysis for kidney failure
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- People with known exposures to the Hepatitis C virus, such as
- Health care workers injured by needlesticks
- Recipients of blood or organs from a donor who tested positive for the Hepatitis C virus
- HIV-infected persons
- Children born to mothers infected with the Hepatitis C virus
Less common risks include:
- Having sexual contact with a person who is infected with the Hepatitis C virus
- Sharing personal care items, such as razors or toothbrushes, that may have come in contact with the blood of an infected person
Additional Resources
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