# P-1840. Implementing Universal Viral Hepatitis C Screening within an Emergency Department: Trends from a South Texas Large Urban County Hospital

**Authors:** Racquel Owino, Delana Gonzales, Serena Gaultier -Soliz, Dianita Gamino, Makayla Tey, Tatiana Emanuel, Ralph Riviello, Anna Taranova

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.2009 · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

A South Texas hospital implemented universal hepatitis C screening in the emergency department, finding a high rate of infections and linking some patients to care.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates the effectiveness of opt-out HCV screening in an ED using EMR integration to identify and manage infections.

## Key findings

- 7% of 20,713 screened patients had a positive hepatitis C antibody result.
- 4% of all screened patients were confirmed positive for hepatitis C.
- 17% of confirmed positive patients were linked to care.

## Abstract

University Health, is South Texas’ only safety net hospital system serving indigent population within a 28 county region. The Emergency Department (ED) supports infectious disease screening as the last resort for healthcare in the region. Hepatitis C is the most common blood-borne infection, with the strongest risk factor being intravenous drug use. Early detection decreases transmission risk through percutaneous blood exposure. University Health provides universal viral hepatitis C testing within the Emergency Department.

University Health implemented HCV screening for adults 18 years and over as per Centers for Disease Control and Prevention screening guidelines. A Best Practice Advisory in electronic Medical Record (EMR) system prompts providers to order reflex tests for confirmatory hepatitis C for all adults 18+ that visit the ED. Patients are screened for the virus unless they opt out of testing. Upon delivery of results by a provider, PNs facilitate linkage to care by educating patients and scheduling a follow-up appointment with a primary care physician or specialist.

Between March 2024 to March 2025, 20,713 patients were screened. Of these, 7 %( n = 1,366) had a positive antibody result, of these 89% (n=1,211) received RNA testing. Of all screened, 4% (n= 774) were confirmed positive with 42% (n=326) having a history of HCV, 58% (n=448) are newly diagnosed or status unknown. Of confirmed positive, 17% (n=132 were linked to care). Of the positive, 40% (n=294) had a history of drug usage.

Implementation of universal HCV screening, integrated within the EMR, is crucial to timely identification of infections within the ED. Hepatitis C rates in the region is high, indicating need for opt out ED screening to reach population at highest risk for infectious diseases such as HCV, as a best practice model in identifying gaps in health care provision within a large urban county hospital.

All Authors: No reported disclosures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12792796