How do foreigners treat hepatitis B? Do you also talk about the color change of hepatitis B like us?

The drafters of the Anti-Discrimination Act and the Disabled Persons Act in the United States believe that "the judgment of danger must be based on medical evidence, not on fear or ignorance". Hepatitis B virus is mainly transmitted through blood or sexual contact, and people who carry the virus have little risk of transmission. Therefore, the school can't dismiss a teacher because he carries hepatitis B virus. American schools do not discriminate against HBV carriers.

In China, many people often "talk about liver discoloration" about hepatitis B, which has great discrimination against hepatitis B patients. This is because hepatitis B has been seriously exaggerated by some false advertisements, and Chinese people's understanding of hepatitis B is not accurate. What is the attitude of foreigners towards hepatitis B? Will they be like us?

1964, NASA biologist Brian Berg first discovered "hepatitis B surface antigen" (that is, "Australian resistance" or hepatitis B virus) among Australian aborigines. However, it is very rare for Australia to "talk about B color change". A hepatitis B virus carrier in New South Wales, Australia complained that when she said in a medical interview that she was a hepatitis B virus carrier, the doctor refused to treat her on the pretext of being "too busy". Finally, the Australian doctor who discriminated against hepatitis B virus carriers made a written apology and said it would not happen again.

At present, Australian law only restricts hepatitis B virus carriers from engaging in health and medical treatment. Australia's Code of Practice for AIDS and Hepatitis Management in the Workplace stipulates that all employment decisions are based only on the moral character and working ability of employees, and whether there is hepatitis B cannot be used as an influencing factor. Employers should keep the health of employees confidential, and they have no obligation to inform anyone that employees are infected with hepatitis B virus.

Schelling, Affiliated Hospital of Geneva University, Switzerland? Fishberg Bohr told reporters that the admission threshold for Swiss civil servants is very high, but there is no hepatitis B test. In the laboratory list equipped in Swiss hospitals, the detection of hepatitis B virus is a special need. Because there is no such test item in the general laboratory sheet, the doctor must input it manually or by computer. Bacchus, an official of Berne Education Authority, said that Swiss schools and kindergartens would not force students and children to produce health certificates. Ju Sai Bu, a senior human resources official of Swiss-based Novartis Pharmaceutical Group, said that due to the special industry, enterprises will take special treatment measures for applicants from regions or countries with high incidence of diseases such as hepatitis B, tuberculosis and AIDS, but enterprises are more concerned about what diseases the applicants have suffered in the past, rather than their current health status.

The drafters of the Anti-Discrimination Act and the Disabled Persons Act in the United States believe that "the judgment of danger must be based on medical evidence, not on fear or ignorance". Hepatitis B virus is mainly transmitted through blood or sexual contact, and people who carry the virus have little risk of transmission. Therefore, the school can't dismiss a teacher because he carries hepatitis B virus. American schools do not discriminate against HBV carriers, nor do they examine anthropologists without their consent, nor do they refuse HBV carriers admission.

It can be seen that foreigners' views on hepatitis B are not as serious as ours, and there is even a tendency not to take hepatitis B seriously at all, and patients with hepatitis B have been well protected.