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This Document Has Been Replaced By: Hepatitis B vaccine : what you need to know

Hepatitis B vaccine : what you need to know

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  • English

  • Details:

    • Description:
      Hepatitis B is a serious infection that affects the liver. It is caused by the hepatitis B virus.

      • In 2009, about 38,000 people became infected with

      hepatitis B.

      • Each year about 2,000 to 4,000 people die in the United

      States from cirrhosis or liver cancer caused by hepatitis B.

      Hepatitis B can cause:

      Acute (short-term) illness. This can lead to:

      • loss of appetite • diarrhea and vomiting

      • tiredness • jaundice (yellow skin or eyes) • pain in muscles, joints, and stomach

      Acute illness, with symptoms, is more common among adults. Children who become infected usually do not have symptoms.

      Chronic (long-term) infection. Some people go on to develop chronic hepatitis B infection. Most of them do not have symptoms, but the infection is still very serious, and can lead to:

      • liver damage (cirrhosis) • liver cancer • death

      Chronic infection is more common among infants and children than among adults. People who are chronically infected can spread hepatitis B virus to others, even if they don’t look or feel sick. Up to 1.4 million people in the United States may have chronic hepatitis B infection.

      Hepatitis B virus is easily spread through contact with the blood or other body fluids of an infected person. People can also be infected from contact with a contaminated object, where the virus can live for up to 7 days.

      • A baby whose mother is infected can be infected at birth;

      • Children, adolescents, and adults can become infected

      by:

      - contact with blood and body fluids through breaks in

      the skin such as bites, cuts, or sores;

      - contact with objects that have blood or body fluids on

      them such as toothbrushes, razors, or monitoring and

      treatment devices for diabetes;

      - having unprotected sex with an infected person;

      - sharing needles when injecting drugs;

      - being stuck with a used needle.

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