https://www.selleckchem.com/products/arn-509.html Hepatitis C is a transmissible hepatic and extra-hepatic disease caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV). HCV develops into a chronic infection among approximately 70% of the contaminated subjects. Chronic HCV infection is estimated to affect between 0.5% and 1 % of the general population in France, which causes an important burden of disease, in particular due to the occurrence of cirrhosis and liver cancer. New antiviral drugs now allow to cure more than 95% of patients in just a few weeks of treatment with very limited safety issues. This therapeutic revolution has led the World Health Organization and many national governments to aim for an elimination of HCV, which has been defined as a 90%-reduction of the incidence rate, and a 65%-reduction in the number of HCV-related deaths on the basis of the 2015 figures. In this respect, the French Ministry of Health has recently decided to extend the ability to prescribe the new antiviral drugs to any physician. However, the elimination campaign of HCV will also nelation. Specific adaptations of the cascade of care within psychiatric settings, including access to treatment, will need to be designed, implemented, and evaluated for reaching micro-elimination of HCV in psychiatry.Objectives To evaluate the prevalence and factors associated with dermatological conditions and to study the peculiarities of comorbidity between psychiatric disorders and dermatological conditions among medical students in Morocco. Methods This is a multicenter, descriptive, and analytical cross-sectional study over a period of 4 weeks during the month of February 2019. Results Six hundred and five students from the seven faculties of medicine of Morocco were included. Dermatological conditions were present in 15.5% (94) of students, acne being the most common condition (10.7%), followed by psoriasis in 1.65% of students as well as urticaria in 1.65%. Psychiatric disorders were present in 28% (168)