Hepatitis C is a serious liver infection that can cause long-term damage, but many people who have it don't show symptoms for years. To catch these hidden cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has updated its official guidance. They now recommend a one-time blood test for hepatitis C for all adults in the United States. They also advise that all pregnant women be screened for the virus during every pregnancy, not just if they have known risk factors.
These are formal public health recommendations, not the results of a new clinical trial. The CDC makes these calls by reviewing existing evidence on disease spread, treatment effectiveness, and testing accuracy. The goal is straightforward: find the infection early so people can get treatment that can cure it and prevent them from passing it to others.
It's important to understand what this means for you. If your doctor follows these guidelines, they might suggest this test at your next check-up, even if you feel perfectly healthy. For pregnant women, it would become a standard part of prenatal care. The recommendations themselves don't report on safety or side effects, as they are about testing, not a specific drug. The real test will be whether healthcare systems and insurance companies make this screening easy and accessible for everyone.