Knowledge and risk perception about hepatitis C: Preliminary evidence from a cross-sectional study of adults living in Louisiana

Novak, Briana, Kiana Panbechi, and Joshua J. Matacotta. 2021. “Knowledge and Risk Perception about Hepatitis C: Preliminary Evidence from a Cross-Sectional Study of Adults Living in Louisiana”. In 2021 Western Medical Research Conference, 69:103-296.

Abstract

Overview of Key Findings

Low Screening Rates: Only about 35–36% of respondents reported ever being tested for HCV, while more than 60% had never been screened. The most common reasons for not testing were believing they were not at risk and never receiving a provider recommendation

Knowledge Gaps: Although nearly all participants (≈98%) had heard of HCV, 65–67% had never heard of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) and did not know HCV was curable

Generational Risk Awareness: About one-quarter of untested participants were from the Baby Boomer generation, a population at increased risk according to CDC guidelines

Perceived Stigma: Roughly 75% of HCV-positive participants and two-thirds of HCV-negative/unknown participants believed people with HCV would be treated differently if they disclosed their status, and nearly 70% believed shame keeps people from seeking treatment

Health Perception: A majority (≈80–83%) reported their health as excellent, very good, or good, and this correlated with lower perceived risk of infection

Last updated on 09/15/2025