Hepatitis B Positive, Management of women identified through antenatal screening (370)

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Antenatal screening for three communicable diseases – hepatitis B, HIV, and syphilis - is offered to all pregnant women. The uptake is over 99% across Greater Glasgow and Clyde for all three diseases. The primary aim of screening for hepatitis B is to ensure a plan for treatment and management for affected individuals and their babies. This allows treatment to be given, which can reduce the risk of mother to child transmission, improves the long-term outcome and development of affected children, and ensures that women, their partners and families are offered appropriate referral, testing and treatment.

Approximately 70 mothers are identified by West of Scotland Specialist Virology Centre (WoSSVC) every year in NHS GGC as being hepatitis B surface antigen positive during antenatal screening.

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Editorial Information

Last reviewed: 30/10/2021

Next review date: 30/11/2024

Author(s): Gillian Penrice.

Approved By: Obstetrics Clinical Governance Group

Document Id: 370

References
  1. EASL 2017 Clinical Practice Guidelines on the management of hepatitis B virus infection. Journal of Hepatology 2017 vol. 67 370–398