Skip to content
Indigenous

Time for Action to Eliminate Hepatitis B and C in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities

National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) and Hepatitis Australia 3 mins read

World Hepatitis Day: Time for Action to Eliminate Hepatitis B and C in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities

Australia is at a turning point in eliminating hepatitis B and C, two diseases that continue to disproportionately affect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. On World Hepatitis Day, NACCHO and Hepatitis Australia are calling for urgent national action, putting community leadership and cultural strengths at the centre of the solution.

Communities Leading the Way

“Every day, Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) prove what’s possible when you back local leadership,” says NACCHO Chair, Donnella Mills. “Our clinics are woven into the fabric of community. We know what works because it’s built on culture, trust, and a genuine understanding of our people’s needs. When we’re supported to lead, the results are clear: health outcomes improve, and gaps start to close.”

Treatment Within Reach

Lucy Clynes, CEO of Hepatitis Australia, says, “There is a cure for hepatitis C. It’s tablets that you can access through primary care, and most people have no side effects. Yet, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities are not benefiting equally from it.”

“There is a vaccine and medication to help you live well with hepatitis B. Managing the condition can be as simple as getting a liver check twice a year.”

What the Numbers Tell Us

Dr Megan Campbell, Medical Advisor at NACCHO, highlights the challenge: “Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples now make up 18% of people living with hepatitis C in Australia. This figure is rising as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people do not equitably benefit from new hepatitis C cures and are disproportionately more likely to be reinfected. The diagnosis rate among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is more than six times higher than the national average. With hepatitis B, the story is similar; Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people represent 7% of people living with chronic hepatitis B but are less likely to have accessed care and treatment. Despite high childhood vaccination rates, many adults who aren’t immune have limited access to vaccination.”

She adds, “But we know what works. When communities have the resources and support to drive solutions, we see real progress. In the Northern Territory, the Hep B PAST program has more than doubled treatment rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people compared to the national average. Community leadership works; it just needs backing.”

Steven Drew, CEO of Hepatitis NSW, says, “Community Hepatitis Organisations play a vital role in partnering with ACCHOs to expand access to hepatitis services. Bringing together topic expertise, peer experts, and cultural knowledge ensures services are not only effective but also trusted and embraced by the communities they serve. When communities are resourced and empowered, we see dramatically better outcomes. It’s time to scale up these efforts nationally.”

Now is the Time for Action

Both NACCHO and Hepatitis Australia agree: Australia can’t close the gap unless Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities are truly leading the way, with the resources and support to deliver what works on the ground.

This means:

  • Backing ACCHOs and communities to drive prevention, testing, treatment, and care

  • Expanding culturally safe services, especially in high-risk places like prisons

  • Improving data, especially on Indigenous status, so every person is counted and

    cared for

  • Investing in proven programs like Hep B PAST and supporting a strong, community-led workforce

    “As a country, we can’t claim progress if the most affected communities are still missing out,” says Donnella Mills. “The way forward is in our hands, and with real commitment, we can end viral hepatitis for everyone, leaving no one behind.”

    Media Contacts:

    Charles David, Senior Media and Communications Advisor, NACCHO [email protected] | 0490 090 544

    Grace Hogan, Communications and Partnerships Manager, Hepatitis Australia [email protected] | 0493 994 523


Key Facts:

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples now make up 18% of people living with hepatitis C in Australia. This figure is rising as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people do not equitably benefit from new hepatitis C cures and are disproportionately more likely to be reinfected.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people represent 7% of people living with chronic hepatitis B but are less likely to have access to care and treatment


About us:

National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO)  oversees a network of 146 members, each running Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) across urban, regional, and remote Australia. These ACCHOs range from large facilities with multiple healthcare professionals providing comprehensive services to smaller centers focused on preventive care and health education, primarily delivered by Aboriginal Health Workers and nurses.


Contact details:

Media Contacts:
Charles David – NACCHO | 📧 [email protected] | 📱 0490 090 544
Grace Hogan – Hepatitis Australia | 📧 [email protected] | 📱 0493 994 523

Linda Apps 0433 999 017

 

More from this category

  • Environment, Indigenous
  • 14/04/2026
  • 12:15
Australian Museum

Hidden in Plain Sight: Meet Australia’s Newly Identified Skink Species

Sydney, 14 April 2026: A lizard known to Wiimpatja Aboriginal Owners as Kungaka “the Hidden One” has been formally described as a new species, acknowledged in research published today in Zootaxa. With fewer than 20 individuals of the species known to exist, the Kungaka is also now one of Australia's most threatened reptiles. Through a partnership with Wiimpatja Aboriginal Owners and the NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service (NPWS), scientists from the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI), have confirmed the Kungaka (Liopholis mutawintji) is a distinct species found only in Mutawintji National Park, north-east of Broken Hill, in NSW. Minister…

  • Education Training, Indigenous
  • 14/04/2026
  • 09:04
Aboriginal Cultural Immersions

Aboriginal Cultural Immersions Drives Authentic NAIDOC Week Engagement Through Aboriginal-Led Workshops and Performances

Key Facts: NAIDOC Week 2026 theme: “50 Years Deadly.” • Aboriginal Cultural Immersions (ACI) delivers Aboriginal-led workshops and performances for NAIDOC Week and beyond.…

  • Contains:
  • Indigenous, Oil Mining Resources
  • 09/04/2026
  • 17:29
Mineral Resources Limited

MinRes and Ear Science hear the call of remote Pilbara communities

Key Facts: MinRes commits £600,000 to extend partnership with Ear Science Institute Australia for three years, supporting the Healthy Hearing Outback program in Western…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.