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Why Hepatitis A deserves a place in India’s universal immunisation programme

 Why in news?

  • India is debating including the Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine (TCV) in the Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP).
  • Experts argue that Hepatitis A vaccination deserves even higher priority because the disease burden is shifting toward adolescents and adults — groups at significantly higher risk of severe disease, including acute liver failure.
  • The article highlights that an effective indigenous Hepatitis A vaccine exists, yet policy inclusion is pending.

Relevance

  • GS 2 – Health / Immunisation
    UIP expansion; vaccine policy; epidemiological transition
  • GS 3 – Public Health
    Outbreak management; sanitation transition; acute liver failure
  • GS 2 – Governance & Policy
    Evidence-based policymaking; cost-effectiveness; indigenous vaccine development

Basics: what is Hepatitis A?

  • Acute viral liver infection typically mild in young children.
  • Historically: >90% Indians exposed in childhood → lifelong immunity.
  • Current shift: improved sanitation → fewer children infected early → more susceptible adolescents & adults.
  • Severe disease in older age groups → acute liver failure, hospitalisation, deaths.
  • No specific antiviral treatment → only supportive care.

Changing epidemiology

  • Seroprevalence (protective antibodies) dropping from ~90% to <60% in many urban regions.
  • Outbreaks reported in Kerala, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi.
  • Clusters of acute liver failure in hospitals show rising severity.
  • Hepatitis A now an emerging public-health threat, not a benign childhood disease.

Hepatitis A vs Typhoid: key contrasts

Disease burden

  • Typhoid mortality declining with antibiotics + sanitation.
  • Hepatitis A rising in older children/adults → more severe outcomes.

Treatment

  • Typhoid: antibiotics available; AMR emerging but treatable.
  • Hepatitis A: no specific treatment, recovery depends entirely on supportive care.

Vaccine characteristics

  • Hepatitis A vaccines:
    • 90–95% efficacy
    • Single dose for live vaccine
    • Long-lasting (15–20 years to lifelong)
    • No issues of waning immunity or resistance
  • Typhoid vaccines: require multi-dose cycles in some settings; immunity relatively shorter.

Programmatic simplicity

  • Hepatitis A vaccine is single-dose, easy to integrate with existing booster schedules.
  • Indigenous product (Biovac-A by Biological E) has two decades of excellent use in private sector.

Cost-effectiveness

  • Hepatitis A: high-cost outbreaks, expensive hospitalisation, severe disease in adults → strong economic rationale for universal vaccination.
  • Typhoid: important but lower immediate cost-effectiveness because mortality has declined.

Why Hepatitis A deserves priority

  • Growing susceptible population: fewer children infected early → rising young adult vulnerability.
  • Severe disease profile: adult infection = higher hospitalisation + acute liver failure risk.
  • No treatment: prevention via vaccination is the only effective shield.
  • Low-hanging fruit:
    • Single dose
    • Long-term immunity
    • Indigenous supply available
  • Clear scientific evidence: declining antibodies + frequent outbreaks.

Recommended strategy for India

  • Adopt a phased introduction, aligned with UIP’s proven approach:
    • Start with States facing repeated outbreaks or low seroprevalence.
    • Co-administer with DPT or MR boosters to use existing systems.
    • Conduct periodic serosurveys to monitor immunity levels.
    • Gradually expand to national scale.

Public health rationale

  • Fits UIP tradition of proactive shifts (Hepatitis B, Rotavirus, Pneumococcal).
  • Helps prevent avoidable severe disease and hospital burden.
  • Reduces long-term healthcare costs by preventing liver complications early.

Overview

Epidemiological relevance

  • The shift from early childhood exposure to adolescent vulnerability reflects Indias sanitation transition.
  • Parallel seen previously in East Asia and Latin America before they introduced universal Hepatitis A vaccination.
  • Without vaccination, India risks repeated outbreaks and rising adult mortality from acute liver failure.

Programmatic feasibility

  • Single-dose administration makes planning efficient.
  • Indigenous production ensures supply security and affordability.
  • Can be rapidly scaled using existing UIP logistics.

Economic considerations

  • Adult hospitalisations for Hep A are expensive (ICU care, liver monitoring, long recovery).
  • Vaccination cost per child is low compared to treatment cost.
  • Higher workforce productivity because adults are protected.

Policy gap

  • Scientific consensus is strong, but policy action is lagging, unlike for TCV where debate is ongoing.
  • No technical barrier: the missing piece is only political and administrative decision-making.

November 2025
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