HEPATITIS A
PREVENTION |
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The single best way to keep from spreading
hepatitis A infection is to wash the hands carefully after using the
toilet. Those who are infected should not share items that might
carry infection. Special care should be taken to avoid transmitting
infection to a sex partner. Travelers should avoid water and ice if
unsure of their purity, or they can boil water for one minute before
drinking it. All foods eaten should be packaged, well cooked or, in
the case of fresh fruit, peeled.
If exposure is a possibility, infection may be
prevented by an injection of a serum fraction containing antibody
against HAV. This material, called immune serum globulin (ISG), is
90% protective even when injected after exposure-providing it is
given within two weeks. Anyone living with an infected patient
should receive ISG. For long-term protection, a killed virus
hepatitis A vaccine became available in 1995. More than 95% of those
vaccinated will develop an adequate amount of anti-HAV antibody.
Those who should consider being vaccinated include healthcare
professionals, those working at day care and similar facilities,
frequent travelers to areas with poor sanitation, those with any
form of chronic liver disease, and those who are very sexually
active. Starting in 2000, routine immunization with the hepatitis A
vaccine was recommended for children born in states where the rate
of hepatitis A was two or more times the national average (Alaska,
Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon,
South Dakota, Utah, and Washington) and suggested in states where
the rate was 1.5 times the national average (Arkansas, Colorado,
Missouri, Montana, Texas and Wyoming). |
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| HEPATITIS A RELATED ITEMS |
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