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Hepatitis B
What Is Hepatitis B?
A disease caused by the Hepatitis B virus (HBV). Although 90-95 percent of adults with HBV recover completely, the virus can cause severe liver disease and death. Unless they are treated within an hour of birth, 90 percent of the infants born to women with HBV will carry the virus. Pregnant women who may have been exposed to HBV should consider being tested before giving birth so that their babies can be vaccinated at birth or treated if they become ill. Like several other viruses, HBV remains in the body for life. HBV is the only sexually transmitted infection that is preventable with vaccination. But about 77,000 Americans get HBV every year because they have not been vaccinated. There are now about 750,000 people with sexually acquired HBV in the U.S. How Do You Get Hepatitis B?
What Are the Symptoms?
How Can You Know For Sure?
How Is It Treated?
What Can Happen If You Don't Take Care of It?
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Adapted from PPFA (www.plannedparenthood.org) and Planned Parenthood Golden Gate (www.ppgg.org) |
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