travelturtle logo

Bookmark this page
Welcome to Travelturtle, the travel website that provides you with country specific medical and vaccination reports usually only available to registered UK healthcare professionals.
travelturtle large logo

 

Hepatitis B

What is it?
Hepatitis B (also known as Hep B) is caused by a virus and results in inflammation of the liver.

Hepatitis B virus is passed through sex, blood, saliva. It can be contracted in a number of ways:

  • sexual intercourse with an infected partner (particularly in men who have sex with men)
  • mother-to-baby transmission
  • blood transfusions
  • infected needles, through practices such as injecting illicit drugs, tattooing or acupuncture
  • infected dental instruments
  • reused razors (eg at a barber)

What does it do?

In many people the disease will give no symptoms and they will remain only carriers. But in 10% of children and 50% of adults, an illness develops after an incubation of 6 to 8 weeks. The effects of Hepatitis B may include suffer nausea, fever, vomiting and a rash followed by jaundice, with around 1% dying of acute hepatitis. A further 10% will instead develop chronic hepatitis, which in up to a quarter of cases will eventually cause fatal cirrhosis or cancer of the liver.

Where is it?

Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and a number of Pacific Islands are high-risk areas in which more than 10% of the local people are carriers. South America, North Africa, Eastern Europe, India, China and the far north of North America are medium-risk areas, with infection rates of 2 to 10%. Western Europe and the rest of North America are low-risk, with fewer than 2% of the population infected.

Can it be treated?

The Hepatitis B virus is treated with long and complex drug therapy on top of supportive care.

Can it be prevented?

Yes
  • Avoid Hepatitis B infection by avoiding sex with strangers and practice safe sex should this occur.
  • Consider vaccination if travelling to high-risk areas or taking part in risky adventure activities.
  • Take a first-aid kit and sterile needles. These can be bought from chemists or travel clinics.
  • Avoid tattooing or acupuncture unless you can be certain the needles are sterile.

Danger rating: 4/10