What You Need to Know
The Importance of Treatment
Recommended Resources

Who Tests for and Treats Hep C?

Haga click aquí para español.

Testing and Further Diagnosis

Your primary care physician (family doctor) can order a blood test to detect the virus. If your test is positive, further evaluation will happen through your doctor or a specialist, such as a gastroenterologist or a hepatologist (liver specialist).

Because hep C management can be complex, you will have the support of several healthcare professionals on your team. In addition to a primary care doctor and a specialist, different types of nurses, a pharmacist, and (in some cases) a mental health professional and specialists in fields such as diet and exercise may be part of your treatment team.

Our HepCFight.com Treatment Decision Tool can help you explore some of the issues involved in your decision to start hep C treatment.

Your Treatment Team

If all of the people who help with your treatment could be in the same room at the same time, managing this team would be much easier for you. However, most often you will have to act as an intermediary for this group—asking your specialist about something your general practitioner said or asking your nurse to explain a doctor’s instructions in more detail. You may also need referrals to get access to certain team members. Sometimes you may feel that it’s all too complicated, but remember that all of your treatment team members want what’s best for your health.

As with any team, members need identifiable roles. You have some choices here and may be limited in other decisions. In general, you need:

There are many other people who can help with your treatment:

Back to Top