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肝胆相照论坛 论坛 乙肝病毒携带者维权 存档 1 一塌糊涂BBS肝炎版:一个阿姨医生和大家谈谈 ...
楼主: 雪绒花

一塌糊涂BBS肝炎版:一个阿姨医生和大家谈谈 [复制链接]

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发表于 2003-9-2 09:23
以下是引用雪绒花在2003-8-27 18:33:00的发言:
但是乙型肝炎患者的餐具不需要特殊处理。


需要的,现在除了在粪便中尚未查出病毒颗粒以外,我们的几乎所有分泌物,包括唾液,汗液都含有HBV病毒颗粒
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发表于 2003-9-2 09:45
阿姨所说的情况大概指的是七八十年代的事,当时的人们的无知造就了一个对HBVER相对宽松的生存环境。而现在我们的压力很大部分应该是绝大部分我觉得是来自于社会;因为随着科学知识的普及,人们对疾病的防范意识普遍增强,造成了我们的生存环境的萎缩和恶化,看看人们对待SARS痊愈者的态度吧,那还是痊愈的人。

另外我认为人们掌握的科技知识越多并不代表人的素质越高,当人们没有信仰的时候会更多的想到自己,在道德不受约束的情况下会牺牲他人保全自己。外国人的深厚宗教信仰对他们的日常行为起到了重要的约束作用,而中国人……没有信仰,信仰**主义只是个笑话。单单靠社会的道德规范来约束……这个规范正在堕落呢。
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发表于 2003-9-2 10:14
以下是引用鳐在2003-9-1 20:23:00的发言:

需要的,现在除了在粪便中尚未查出病毒颗粒以外,我们的几乎所有分泌物,包括唾液,汗液都含有HBV病毒颗粒

准确说是查出HBV的外壳蛋白HBSAG,但那能说明什么问题?那样低的含量能通过人体的胃液考验吗?能使健康人感染吗?
[B]Heal the liver![/B]

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发表于 2003-9-2 10:27
以下是引用雪绒花在2003-9-1 21:14:00的发言:
准确说是查出HBV的外壳蛋白HBSAG,但那能说明什么问题?那样低的含量能通过人体的胃液考验吗?能使健康人感染吗?


说明危险是存在的,哪怕1%,而一般人会盯着这1%的危险而忽略了那99%的安全。我只求严谨,不低估不夸大,没别的意思。
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发表于 2003-9-2 10:31
WHO(世界卫生组织)网站上的英文资料表明,一般的生活接触不会传染乙肝, 即使吃了hbv污染的食物,也不会感染上乙肝.乙肝是通过血液,性接触传染的.注射乙肝疫苗后, 有了抗体的人能够得到保护而不会被传染.
[B]Heal the liver![/B]

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发表于 2003-9-2 10:37
HEPATITIS B

Hepatitis B is one of the major diseases of mankind and is a serious global public health problem. It is preventable with safe and effective vaccines that have been available since 1982. Of the 2 billion people who have been infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV), more than 350 million have chronic (lifelong) infections. These chronically infected persons are at high risk of death from cirrhosis of the liver and liver cancer, diseases that kill about one million persons each year. Although the vaccine will not cure chronic hepatitis, it is 95% effective in preventing chronic infections from developing, and is the first vaccine against a major human cancer. In 1991, the World Health Organization (WHO) called for all children to receive the hepatitis B vaccine, and 116 countries have added this vaccine to their routine immunization programmes. However, the children in the poorest countries, who need the vaccine the most, have not been receiving it because their governments cannot afford it. Fortunately, hepatitis B vaccine will soon be available in these countries with the assistance of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) and the Global Fund for Children's Vaccines.

What is Hepatitis?

Hepatitis means inflammation of the liver, and the most common cause is infection with one of 5 viruses, called hepatitis A,B,C,D, and E. All of these viruses can cause an acute disease with symptoms lasting several weeks including yellowing of the skin and eyes (jaundice); dark urine; extreme fatigue; nausea; vomiting and abdominal pain. It can take several months to a year to feel fit again. Hepatitis B virus can cause chronic infection in which the patient never gets rid of the virus and many years later develops cirrhosis of the liver or liver cancer. HBV is the most serious type of viral hepatitis and the only type causing chronic hepatitis for which a vaccine is available.

Who gets Hepatitis B ?

In much of the developing world, (sub-Saharan Africa, most of Asia, and the Pacific), most people become infected with HBV during childhood, and 8% to 10% of people in the general population become chronically infected. In these regions liver cancer caused by HBV figures among the first three causes death by cancer in men.

High rates of chronic HBV infection are also found in the Amazon and the southern parts of Eastern and Central Europe. In the Middle East and Indian sub-continent, about 5% are chronically infected. Infection is less common in Western Europe and North America, where less than 1% are chronically infected.

Young children who become infected with HBV are the most likely to develop chronic infection. About 90% of infants infected during the first year of life and 30% to 50% of children infected between 1 to 4 years of age develop chronic infection. The risk of death from HBV-related liver cancer or cirrhosis is approximately 25% for persons who become chronically infected during childhood.

How do people get infected ?

Hepatitis B virus is transmitted by contact with blood or body fluids of an infected person in the same way as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the virus that causes AIDS. However, HBV is 50 to 100 times more infectious than HIV.

The main ways of getting infected with HBV are:

Perinatal (from mother to baby at the birth);
Child- to-child transmission;
Unsafe injections and transfusions;
Sexual contact.
Worldwide, most infections occur from infected mother to child, from child to child contact in household settings, and from reuse of unsterilized needles and syringes. In many developing countries, almost all children become infected with the virus.

In many industrialized countries (e.g. Western Europe and North America), the pattern of transmission is different. In these countries, mother-to-infant and child-to-child transmission accounted for up to one third of chronic infections before childhood hepatitis B vaccination programmes were implemented. However, the majority of infections in these countries are acquired during young adulthood by sexual activity, and injecting drug use. In addition, hepatitis B virus is the major infectious occupational hazard of health workers, and most health care workers have received hepatitis B vaccine.

Hepatitis B virus is not spread by contaminated food or water, and cannot be spread casually in the workplace.

Can chronic hepatitis B and liver cancer be treated?

Liver cancer is almost always fatal, and usually develops between 35 and 65 years of age, when people are maximally productive and with family responsibilities. The loss of a mother or a father in a developing country can devastate the entire family. In developing countries, most people with liver cancer die within months of diagnosis. In industrialized countries, surgery and chemotherapy can prolong life up to a few years. Chronic hepatitis B in some patients is treated with drugs called interferon or lamivudine, which can help some patients. However, interferon or lamivudine therapy costs thousands of dollars and will never be available to most patients in developing countries. Patients with cirrhosis are sometimes given liver transplants, with varying success. It is preferable to prevent this disease with vaccine than to try and cure it.

How safe and effective is the vaccine?

Hepatitis B vaccine has an outstanding record of safety and effectiveness. Since 1982, over one billion doses of hepatitis B vaccine have been used worldwide. The vaccine is given as a series of three intramuscular doses. Studies have shown that the vaccine is 95% effective in preventing children and adults from developing chronic infection if they have not yet been infected. In many countries where 8% to 15% of children used to become chronically infected with HBV, the rate of chronic infection has been reduced to less than 1% in immunized groups of children.

How is WHO trying to control Hepatitis B?

Since 1991, WHO has called for all countries to add hepatitis B vaccine into their national immunization programmes. As of March 2000, 116 countries had included hepatitis B vaccine in their national programmes including most countries in Eastern and South- East Asia, the Pacific Islands, Australia, North and South America, Western Europe and the Middle East. However, many low income countries in sub-Saharan Africa, the Indian subcontinent and in the Newly Independent States do not use the vaccine. The price of the hepatitis B vaccine has been one of the main obstacles to its introduction in many of these countries.

The Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) was created in 1999. It is a unique coalition of public and private institutions where WHO has taken a leading role. The main mission of GAVI is to vaccinate as many children as possible against vaccine-preventable diseases. GAVI has introduced a new approach to international health funding: the Global Fund for Children's vaccines (GFCV). This fund will help 74 low-income countries to reinforce their national vaccine programmes and introduce hepatitis B, yellow fever and haemophilus influenzae type b(Hib) vaccines into their national immunization programmes.

[B]Heal the liver![/B]

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发表于 2003-9-2 10:43
我也赞同打了疫苗可以非常有效的防止传染,是不是打了疫苗的人都可以和HBVER正常 接触而不歧视我们呢,我想说的是千万不要去考验人性,因为它不堪一击。我是个人性的悲观论者哈。
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发表于 2003-9-2 10:50
但是既然你提到要给乙肝感染者的餐具单独处理,那不是等于告诉大家:我有肝炎!
让大家来歧视你吗?
我不敢在大庭广众之下宣传自己是乙肝,不知道别人怎么看,总之自己不用别人餐具,问心无愧就得了
[B]Heal the liver![/B]

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发表于 2003-9-2 11:00
以下是引用雪绒花在2003-9-1 21:50:00的发言:
但是既然你提到要给乙肝感染者的餐具单独处理,那不是等于告诉大家:我有肝炎!
让大家来歧视你吗?
我不敢在大庭广众之下宣传自己是乙肝,不知道别人怎么看,总之自己不用别人餐具,问心无愧就得了


错啦错啦~~呵呵~~我只是说餐具需要处理因为带病毒,怎么处理看餐厅消毒严不严了,但绝对不支持在餐馆暴露自己,会被踢到大街上去地,同时建议大家如果下馆子到卫生条件好的正规餐厅吃饭,尽量少吃路边大排档,利人利己。
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荣誉之星 乐园开心

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发表于 2003-9-2 11:02
即使不是为了防止肝炎,也是要防止肠道疾病的,急性胃肠炎可是真正的病从口入啊!
[B]Heal the liver![/B]
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