|
China has 93m HBsAg carriers
BEIJING—About 93 million
Chinese, or 7.18 percent of the total population are hepatitis B surface
antigen (HBsAg) carriers, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said on Monday.
The country sees a disproportionate ratio of carriers as an MOH survey
shows that people in western and interior provinces are more likely to
carry the virus than people in eastern and coastal provinces, said Hao
Yang, deputy director of the Ministry’s disease prevention and control
bureau, at a press conference.
Age is another factor, as the rate for children aged from one to four
carrying HBsAg is 0.96 percent, much lower than the 8.57 percent of
those from 15 to 59, according to the survey, which was based on the
research and study of the Ministry since 2006.
The survey also reveals that the three-shot inoculation rate of
Hepatitis B vaccine among newborns has soared from 30 percent in 1992,
when hepatitis B virus(HBV) was first brought into a national
immunization plan, to 93 percent in 2005.
The rate for newborns to receive the first shot, or prompt shot also
increased from 22 percent in 1992 to 82 percent in 2005.
Three shots are usually necessary for children to build their immune
system against HBV. The first shot for newborns is usually injected on
the first day after their birth, which is critical for them to cut
maternal HBV transmission.
HBsAg is a protein antigen produced by HBV. This antigen is the earliest
indicator of acute hepatitis B and frequently identifies infected people
before symptoms appear. Chinese job hunters, including those seeking
government posts, have long complained of discrimination on the grounds
of Hepatitis B.
In 2005, the government issued a health standard that included Hepatitis
B carriers among eligible candidates for the civil service.
—Xinhua |