hepatitis B, Vaccine
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CDC advisers make their 1st childhood vaccine edit
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Hepatitis B can either be acute or chronic and is potentially fatal. Symptoms include “fever, feeling tired, not wanting to eat, upset stomach, throwing up, dark urine, gray-colored stool, joint pain and yellow skin and eyes,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Since the hepatitis B vaccine was recommended for all babies at birth in 1991, new cases in the United States have declined significantly, especially among young people. The people at highest risk for contracting hepatitis B include health care workers, IV drug users and people having sex.
The CDC currently says a timely administration of a hepatitis B vaccine is essential to help prevent transmission of the virus from mother to child at birth. While efforts to test for this virus during pregnancy have improved detection, cases can still be missed, or documentation may be inaccurate or incomplete.
Medical experts say vaccination is the best prevention method for hepatitis B, a liver infection that can be acute or chronic. The disease has no cure and can cause a variety of complications.
A CDC advisory panel voted for changes to the vaccine schedule as Arizona's immunization rates have dropped for years.
Young children who contract hepatitis B are at far greater risk of becoming chronically ill. Babies receive three doses of the vaccine; the initial shot is given on the first day of life.