Consensus Development Conference on Management of Hepatitis C
What is the natural history of hepatitis C?
What is the most appropriate approach to diagnose and monitor patients?
What recommendations can be made to patients to prevent transmission?
Which patients should be treated?
What is the most effective approach to therapy?
What are the most important areas for future research on hepatitis C?
The panel will present its draft statement to the public for comment on the morning of the third and final day of the conference. Following this public comment session, the panel will release its final consensus statement at the news conference and take questions from the media. The consensus statement is the report of an independent panel and is not a policy statement of the NIH or the Federal Government.
The consensus panel will be chaired by Donald Powell, M.D., Professor and Chairman, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Dr. Powell will moderate the news conference.
The NIH Consensus Development Program was established in 1977 as a form of "science court" to resolve in an unbiased manner controversial topics in medicine. To date, NIH has conducted 120 such conferences addressing a wide range of controversial medical issues important to health care providers, patients, and the general public. An average of six consensus conferences are held each year.
Additional information about this conference, including the meeting agenda and area hotels, is also available at the NIH Consensus Development Program web site at http://consensus.nih.gov. To register for the conference, call 301-770-3153.