Hepatitis C causes: Difference between revisions

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#REDIRECT [[Hepatitis C virus]]
HCV is transmitted primarily through large or repeated percutaneous (i.e., passage through the skin) exposures to infectious blood, such as
*Injection drug use (currently the most common means of HCV transmission in the United States)
*Receipt of donated blood, blood products, and organs (once a common means of transmission but now rare in the United States since blood screening became available in 1992)
*Needlestick injuries in health care settings
*Birth to an HCV-infected mother
*HCV can also be spread infrequently through
*Sex with an HCV-infected person (an inefficient means of transmission)
*Sharing personal items contaminated with infectious blood, such as razors or toothbrushes (also inefficient vectors of transmission)
*Other health care procedures that involve invasive procedures, such as injections (usually recognized in the context of outbreaks)


==References==
[[Category:Emergency mdicine]]
{{Reflist|2}}
[[Category:Disease]]
 
[[Category:Up-To-Date]]
[[Category:Hepatitis|C]]
[[Category:Infectious disease]]
[[Category:Hepatology]]
[[Category:Gastroenterology]]
[[Category:Gastroenterology]]
[[Category:Infectious disease]]
[[Category:Disease]]
{{WH}}
{{WS}}

Latest revision as of 22:05, 29 July 2020

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