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Can hepatitis B virus carriers pass the premarital examination?

In the past, a pair of young rural youths went to a medical examination hospital for a pre-marital physical examination three days before their marriage. As a result, the woman was found to be positive for hepatitis B and the man was fine. The girl cried on the spot, crying so sadly. The man's parents also announced that they did not agree with their son marrying this girl and stopped going through the marriage process. Although the doctor did some ideological work for the boy and his family at that time and told him that hepatitis B can be treated and will not affect marriage and childbirth, the marriage still failed due to the man's deep-rooted fear of hepatitis B. Although the girl's disease was eventually cured, her psychological shadow could not be eliminated for a long time. This example shows that many people now have a fear of hepatitis B. Coupled with some inappropriate publicity in society, many people are even afraid of contact with hepatitis B patients, let alone making friends, getting married, etc. So, how to treat hepatitis B patients correctly, especially how boys should treat your hepatitis B girlfriend correctly? Let’s talk about it from several aspects: 1. Epidemic situation: There are currently as many as 120 million hepatitis B and hepatitis B carriers in my country, of which about 40 to 50 million are women. If so many girls cannot make friends, get married, or have children, then how many more bachelors will China have? 2. The difference between hepatitis B and hepatitis B virus carriers: Many people in society confuse these two concepts and think that as long as HBSAG (+) is found, it is hepatitis B. In fact, they are very different. Real hepatitis B is a patient with clinical symptoms, repeated liver function abnormalities for about half a year, uneven B-ultrasound light spots, positive hepatitis B markers or positive hepatitis B mutant strains. Hepatitis B carriers have no clinical symptoms and only have hepatitis B. Markers are positive, liver function B-ultrasound is normal for half a year to more than one year, and no attacks occur for many years. 3. How contagious is the hepatitis B girlfriend? The degree of infectivity depends on the girlfriend's virus replication and the man's resistance. If the man has immune antibodies, namely HB-SAB (+), he will not be infected. Negative immune antibodies can be prevented by injecting hepatitis B vaccine. 4. Will my girlfriend infect hepatitis B to her family, colleagues and friends? Won't. Hepatitis B is a gastrointestinal tract-borne disease rather than a respiratory tract-borne disease, which means that hepatitis B is transmitted through body fluids. The so-called bodily fluid infection includes transfusion of blood containing hepatitis B virus, use of unclean syringes, and hepatitis B virus on the equipment used for tooth extraction. Hepatitis B virus is only contagious when it enters the bloodstream. If you talk face to face with a hepatitis B patient, the saliva containing bacteria will adhere to the damaged parts of the normal person's body and enter the blood. Normal people may be infected with hepatitis B. Under normal circumstances, eating and talking will not cause hepatitis B infection. 5. Can I marry my girlfriend who has hepatitis B? From a medical point of view, as long as your girlfriend is not in the onset stage of hepatitis or has not been diagnosed with post-hepatitis cirrhosis, you can get married. If your girlfriend is only a healthy carrier of hepatitis B, you can get married. As for the example mentioned earlier, why we still broke up, we need to find reasons from other aspects. 6. Can I get my girlfriend with hepatitis B pregnant after getting married? If your girlfriend's acute hepatitis B is basically cured and stable for more than 6 months, and if her chronic hepatitis reaches the improvement standard and is stable for more than one year, she can become pregnant. 7. If a wife with hepatitis B gives birth to a child, will the virus be passed on to the child? At present, hepatitis B prevention is relatively comprehensive and successful. As long as prevention is carried out under the guidance of a hepatologist, pregnant women and newborns are subject to "three blocks" - newborns are promptly injected with high-potency hepatitis B immune globules within 24 hours of birth. Protein, and then injecting hepatitis B vaccine respectively in 2, 3, and 5 months can effectively prevent infection with hepatitis B virus. The success rate is more than 95%, that is, more than 95% of newborns will not be infected with hepatitis B. In short, hepatitis B patients need people to understand and support, and hepatitis B girlfriends need double love and care from their boyfriends.