

July 28, 2025
(Washington, DC)— Today, on this year’s World Hepatitis Day, a coalition of organizations representing patients, health care providers, and public health systems is calling on Congress to seize a historic opportunity to eliminate a devastating disease by passing the bipartisan Cure Hepatitis C Act of 2025 (S.1941) introduced by Senators Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Chris Van Hollen (D-MD).
“We urge Congress to act now. With the tools already available, we can cure hepatitis C, save thousands of lives, and dramatically reduce health care costs nationwide,” said Tim Leshan, Chief External Relations and Advocacy Officer for the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) and member of the Hepatitis C Elimination Coalition.
Hepatitis C remains a major public health threat, with estimates that at least 4 million Americans are chronically infected. Known as a “silent killer,” the disease can progress for years without symptoms while causing irreversible liver damage and increasing the risk for other chronic conditions such as diabetes and kidney disease. Without early diagnosis and treatment, hepatitis C can lead to liver cirrhosis, cancer, and even death. The only last-resort option, liver transplantation, is expensive, limited, and inaccessible for many. Each year, one in five patients awaiting liver transplants dies or becomes too ill to receive one.
Yet, a cure exists. For over a decade, safe and effective oral medications have been available, curing more than 95% of patients in just eight to 12 weeks. The barriers to eliminating hepatitis C are no longer medical; they are structural: lack of screening, treatment access, and funding.
The Cure Hepatitis C Act of 2025 offers a clear solution. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects it will save $6.5 billion over ten years, and the legislation includes:
Several states, including Louisiana, Washington, and Texas, have already piloted similar strategies with substantial success in reducing hepatitis C prevalence. The Cure Hepatitis C Act of 2025 (S.1941) offers a national blueprint to scale these results, enabling the US to finally bring this epidemic under control.
“For every one million people cured over the next decade, we can prevent 34,000 cases of liver cancer, 2,500 liver transplants, and 24,000 deaths,” says Leshan.
This World Hepatitis Day, we stand united in our commitment to eliminate hepatitis C for all Americans. We respectfully urge Congress to pass S.1941, the Cure Hepatitis C Act, this year. The time to act is now.
Media Contact:
Tim Leshan, MPA
Chief External Relations and Advocacy Officer
Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health
On behalf of the Hepatitis C Elimination Coalition
tleshan@aspph.org
202-296-1099 ext. 132
OTHER STATEMENTS:
July 10, 2025
The Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) is proud to announce the launch of the IDEA Institute—Innovation, Discovery, and Excellence in Academia—a new initiative designed to support transformative teaching, research, and leadership in academic public health.
June 24, 2025
Chronic disease now drives 90% of US health care costs, yet half of chronic conditions are preventable. Public health leaders say the nation can no longer afford to treat illness after it appears and today released a bold new report, Healthy Longevity: Public Health’s Next Frontier, calling for immediate action to close the widening gap between how long Americans live and how long they live in good health.
The Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) represents more than 150 accredited schools and programs of public health, including a community of more than 103,000 deans, faculty, staff, and students. ASPPH is the voice of academic public health – we train the next generation of public health professionals, convene leaders, generate evidence, and advocate for policies that improve the health and well-being of everyone, everywhere. ASPPH envisions a world where all people live in thriving communities supported by the work of resilient and competent public health professionals.
For more information, contact Tim Leshan at tleshan@aspph.org or 202-296-1099, ext.132.