According to the health ministry, states and Union Territories will work out the logistics, including number of beneficiaries which requires the vaccination and the quantity of vaccines
The government has decided to vaccinate all healthcare workers, involved in conducting deliveries, giving injections and exposed to blood or blood products, for Hepatitis-B.
Hepatitis-B vaccination is recommended for all healthcare workers with occupational exposure, who have not received a complete primary series, Union Health Ministry said in a official statement.
“On directions of Union Health Minister JP Nadda, the Health Ministry has taken a decision to vaccinate all healthcare workers who are at an increased risk of acquiring Hepatitis-B infection such as those involved in conducting deliveries, giving injections and exposed to blood or blood products,” the statement said.
Reports from India indicate that only 16-60 per cent of healthcare workers have received complete Hepatitis-B immunization. Paramedics have a higher risk of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) transmission and receive HBV vaccination less often than doctors. Vaccination is effective in protecting 90-95 per cent, the ministry said.
“HBV infection is a well-recognized occupational risk for health-care workers (including trainees), and others ( housekeeping staff, emergency workers) exposed to infected blood and body fluids or blood-contaminated environments.
“Because of their contact with patients or infective material, healthcare workers are at considerably greater risk of HBV infection than the general population,” the statement said.
It pointed out that healthcare workers are often unaware of all exposures to potentially infectious blood and body fluids, or contaminated environments. Even when exposures are recognised, healthcare workers often do not seek post-exposure prophylactic management.
“Hepatitis B vaccination safeguards health workers when administered early, ideally before occupational exposure, and provides greater protection for patients from infection through exposure to contaminated environments or infected workers,” the statement said.
The Health Ministry said that in 2015, the prevalence of Hepatitis-B Virus among general population in India ranges from 2 to 8 per cent, which places the country in an intermediate HBV endemicity zone while with 50 million cases it is also the second largest global pool of chronic HBV infections.
However, the global prevalence of Hepatitis-B Virus (HBV) infection in the general population was estimated at 3.5 per cent with about 257 million persons living with chronic HBV infection.
“It is a major global health problem, and the most serious type of viral hepatitis. It is estimated that about 780,000 people die each year due to consequences of Hepatitis B, such as liver cirrhosis and liver cancer,” the statement said.
The Ministry is already taking many initiatives to prevent Hepatitis-B which include the vaccine that is given at birth and as a part of routine immunisation under the Universal Immunization Programme, and the use of auto-disposable syringes for vaccination to prevent spread through contaminated syringes and proper disposal of bio-medical waste.
About the dosage, statement said,”The adult schedule to be followed for the dosage – that is – three doses of Hepatitis-B are to be given within a period of 1-6 months.
“The states and Union Territories will work out the logistics, including number of beneficiaries which requires the vaccination and the quantity of vaccines. The vaccination remains effective for a long period,” the ministry added.
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