“Hepatitis B Mother” can give breastfeeding

A recent survey shows that more and more new mothers choose to give up breastfeeding due to various reasons, some of them are willing to while some others are reluctant. Maybe they give up breastfeeding because of too much pressure from work or because they are lack of enough time. But there are also one group of mothers who have to give up breastfeeding. In China. Every year there are about an estimated 700,000 pregnant women. Because these mothers worry about hepatitis B infection that may be caused during the  process of breastfeeding the baby, they often give up breastfeeding. Zheng Yingjie, an expert in this area, maintains that breastfeeding will not increase the risk of hepatitis B infection among babies who were born by mothers carrying hepatitis B. This is because these babies may develop hepatitis B infections in utero or at birth, not during breastfeeding. Currently no evidence has shown that breastfeeding increases the chance of infection in infants and thus he recommended that all hepatitis B mothers carry out breastfeeding.
Experts also appealed to the whole society to treat the group of people who suffered hepatitis B as well as other contagious diseases like HIV. They are not so easy to be passed on from the patient to the healthy people as most people have imagined.

A recent survey shows that more and more new mothers choose to give up breastfeeding due to various reasons, some of them are willing to while some others are reluctant. Maybe they give up breastfeeding because of too much pressure from work or because they are lack of enough time. But there are also one group of mothers who have to give up breastfeeding. In China. Every year there are about an estimated 700,000 pregnant women. Because these mothers worry about hepatitis B infection that may be caused during the  process of breastfeeding the baby, they often give up breastfeeding. Zheng Yingjie, an expert in this area, maintains that breastfeeding will not increase the risk of hepatitis B infection among babies who were born by mothers carrying hepatitis B. This is because these babies may develop hepatitis B infections in utero or at birth, not during breastfeeding. Currently no evidence has shown that breastfeeding increases the chance of infection in infants and thus he recommended that all hepatitis B mothers carry out breastfeeding.  Experts also appealed to the whole society to treat the group of people who suffered hepatitis B as well as other contagious diseases like HIV. They are not so easy to be passed on from the patient to the healthy people as most people have imagined.

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