The fall 2017 edition of Alert Diver contains a potentially misleading article on hep c and diving that included insights from Robert Gish. That article replaced an article submitted to DAN that I cowrote with Dr. Gish (an internationally recognized expert on hepatitis). With Dr. Gish's permission, and in hopes of dissipating confusion, here is the previously unpublished piece.
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Diving and Hepatitis C: Know the Facts
Robert Gish MD and C. L. Kutz
You’ve probably seen the television ads aimed at baby boomers. They warn you of your chances of having hepatitis C while advertising drugs that will cure it in 8-12 weeks. You may in fact know you are infected, or a dive buddy may have told you that they have it, confidentially. Confidentially, because there is a lot of shame and discrimination surrounding this disease. Also, from a provider perspective, there is HIPAA, which provides privacy around all health care issues.
As a diver and DAN reader, you should know the facts about chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV), and whether it affects your diving lifestyle.
According to a recently released (Jan. 2017)
Viral Hepatitis Action Plan prepared by the Office of HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Policy (OHAIDP), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, and other U.S. health agencies, “an estimated 4.4 million Americans from all walks of life are living with chronic viral hepatitis infection and are at increased risk for liver disease, liver cancer, and death. In 2012, hepatitis C-related deaths surpassed deaths from all other reportable infectious diseases combined and continued to rise in 2013 and 2014, killing more Americans each year.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that 75 percent of U.S. citizens infected with hepatitis C are baby boomers, many of whom don’t know they have it because the disease can be asymptomatic for decades. Thus the CDC recommends that all persons born from 1945 through 1965 should be tested. Others who should be tested include people with elevated liver tests, persons who have ever injected illegal drugs (even if it was just once many years ago), recipients of blood transfusions or solid organ transplants prior to July 1992, recipients of clotting factor concentrates made before 1987, anyone who has had blood exposure via sharps, health care workers who have been stuck by a needle contaminated with HCV-positive blood, all persons with HIV infection, and anyone born to an HCV-positive mother. (Further guidelines are at
HCV FAQs for Health Professionals | Division of Viral Hepatitis | CDC)
Although knowing that millions of people have hepatitis C and the majority don’t know it is frightening, it is imperative that you understand that hepatitis C is NOT casually transmitted. Transmission can occur through blood-to-blood contact via contaminated blood products, needle sharing, medical sharp devices, tattooing, and, much more rarely, through sex with an HCV-infected person or from mother to child. The current medical literature does not indicate transmission in any other manner.
A person with hepatitis C is under no obligation to tell a friend or dive buddy that they have hepatitis C. In fact this type of health care information is protected by HIPAA. The current drugs prescribed for the cure pose no adverse affects specific to a diver. And so unlikely is casual transmission of hepatitis C that the “CDC's
recommendations for prevention and control of HCV infection specify that persons should not be excluded from work, school, play, child care, or other settings on the basis of their HCV infection status. There is no evidence of HCV transmission from food handlers, teachers, or other service providers in the absence of blood-to-blood contact.”- From
HCV FAQs for Health Professionals | Division of Viral Hepatitis | CDC. This expert, Dr Gish, believes this applies directly to HCV and diving medicine.
Shared equipment environments such as dive shops, aquarium dive programs, and university dive programs pose no disease transmission risk to divers. Furthermore, bleach solutions are often used to sanitize equipment; bleach kills HCV. HCV requires directly blood to blood exposure to pose any risk of transmission.
So let’s look at an unlikely scenario: You have to practice using alternate air sources with someone with cracked, bleeding lips who also happens to have hepatitis C (he doesn’t know). Assuming he unwisely gets in a pool while actively bleeding from a wound, you are in no danger of becoming infected by HCV by either being in the pool with him or from sharing air via an octo. There is no blood-to-blood contact occurring, and furthermore, the virus will not survive for any significant time in salt or chlorinated water.
Sadly, factual awareness of hepatitis C is low among the general public and medical professionals. As a result, there is fear, stigma, and discrimination surrounding this disease, preventing many people from getting tested and linked to care, and also obtaining proper advice.
This shouldn’t be the case. If you are a baby boomer or have the other indications mentioned here, get tested. And if you test positive for HCV, you can be cured in 8-12 weeks; you can continue to safely dive; and there is no possibility of casually passing your disease on to anyone.
Also keep in mind that several federal laws protect people with viral hepatitis, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
There is a plethora of online information available by searching for “CDC” and “hepatitis C”. You can also improve your understanding by taking a free online course about hepatitis C at
Robert G. Gish Consultants, LLC