Asian-Americans
Statistics
What You Should Do
HBV Blood Tests
Hepatitis B Vaccination
What Every Carrier
Should Know
Liver Cancer
Hepatitis A
Physicians and Healthcare Workers
Hepatitis B Myths
Patient's Rights
Educational Materials
Personal Experiences
The handbook has been praised for being comprehensive while retaining an easy-to-read and user-friendly format. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the leading federal agency charged with promoting the health and safety of the American people, has even placed this guide on their website for use by all health professionals and government agencies. You can visit http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hepatitis/b.
Download: (4.29 MB) 2007 Physician's Guide to Hepatitis B (2007, NEW!)
Download: (32.9 MB) A Physican's Guide to Hepatitis B (2005)
Download: (12.8 MB) A Physician and Patient's Guide to Hepatitis B (2003)
Recommendations for HBV+ healthcare workers: In the United States, there are no legal restrictions preventing health care workers with chronic hepatitis B from practicing medicine. To minimize the risk of transmitting HBV and any other blood borne illness, the CDC recommends that health care workers should always: 1) Wear gloves when seeing patients 2) Wash hands between seeing different patients 3) Dispose of all needles after one-time use
CDC. Recommendations for Preventing Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Hepatitis B Virus to Patients During Exposure-Prone Invasive Procedures. Link
Chiarello LA, et al. Risks and prevention of bloodborne virus transmission from infected healthcare providers. Seminar in Infection Control 2001 Vol 1, No. 1; 61-72.
Beltrami EM, et al. Risk and management of blood-borne infections in health care workers. Clinical Microbiology Reviews 2000; 13:385-407.
CDC. Prevention & Control of Hepatitis B in Healthcare Settings. Link
National Business Group on Health. Hepatitis B: Infectious Disease Outbreaks and Trends. Link
