By David Hilmers | Chief Medical Officer
To our supporters:
We thank you for your continued support. Since the beginning of 2024, our Hepatitis B Free teams have been very active, and the rest of the year will be busy, indeed. As we visit our wide-ranging projects our goals include: increasing public awareness of the dangers of hepatitis; building infrastructure such as strengthening testing and laboratory capabilities; training health personnel to achieve sustainability; reducing the burden of disease through prevention and treatment; and ultimately, eliminating hepatitis in each country.
In January, Dr. Alice Lee and Sue Huntley travelled to the Pacific Island country of Niue. A recent screening of the entire population of Niue for hepatitis B identified a small number of positive cases. These individuals were seen by our team and started on treatment as indicated. These accomplishments qualify Niue to be the first country in the world to have eliminated hepatitis B. A film crew from New Zealand documented these activities, and a link to the video will be posted on our website www.hepatitisbfree.org.au
A team consisting of Drs. Alice Lee, Thomas Russell, and David Hilmers, along with Sue Huntley and sonographer Grace Moon visited our project in Kiribati in March. We had an extremely busy yet highly productive trip. Major activities included the introduction of a new electronic health record to the hepatitis clinic at the main hospital in South Tarawa; evaluating approximately 250 patients in clinic; performing endoscopy (gastroscopy and colonoscopy) and training local physicians in its use; teaching medical assistants and nurses about hepatitis during a two day seminar; and providing hepatitis education for medical students, medical residents, and staff. Endoscopy revealed three previously undiagnosed cancers, and several more cancers were identified by ultrasound and during clinical examination. Approximately 100 patients were started or continued on life-saving therapy during our clinics. In addition, we had productive meetings with the Australian embassy, the local World Health Organization representative, volunteers from other charitable organizations, officials from local and foreign businesses, and high level members of the Ministry of Health and Medical Services. Many needs remain unfilled due to inadequate funding, particularly on the more remote outer islands, and we are in the process of submitting multiple grants to potential donors to try to bridge these gaps. We have already started a universal screening program on South Tarawa, where over half the population of Kiribati lives, with our partners from the University of Sydney with whom we share a grant from the Australian government.
The rest of 2024 promises to be full on. Two more trips are planned to Kiribati and at least one to Papua New Guinea and Tonga. In September a team will travel to Madagascar to continue our work there. None of this could be possible without your support and encouragement, both of which are deeply appreciated.
Best wishes,
David Hilmers
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser