Many 
                  U.S. Babies Do Not Receive Recommended Therapy to Prevent Hepatitis 
                  B Infection
                
                  
                   
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                          | SUMMARY: 
                            About 14% of babies born to mothers with hepatitis 
                            B virus (HBV) and about 20% born to women of unknown 
                            HBV status in the U.S. do not receive recommended 
                            vaccinations or other therapies to prevent them from 
                            acquiring the virus, according to a CDC analysis of 
                            practices at more than 200 hospitals described in 
                            the April 
                            2010 issue of Pediatrics.  | 
                         
                       
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                By 
                  Liz Highleyman
                
                HBV 
                  can be transmitted from mother to child during pregnancy or 
                  delivery, but the risk can be minimized with post-exposure prophylaxis 
                  (PEP) using hepatitis B vaccination, injected antibodies (HBV 
                  immune globulin or HBIG), or both. 
                  
                  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends 
                  that pregnant women should be tested for HBV and that infants 
                  born to HBV positive mothers should receive their first dose 
                  of the HBV vaccine at birth, with additional "booster" 
                  shots at 1 and 6 months. Beyond this recommendation, HBV vaccination 
                  is included in the schedule of routine infant immunizations.
                  
                  Bayo Willis and CDC colleagues assessed hospital policies and 
                  practices to prevent perinatal transmission of HBV and to identify 
                  gaps that could be addressed to improve outcomes. 
                  
                  Despite availability of PEP, approximately 40-90 perinatal HBV 
                  infections are reported to the CDC each year, and experts think 
                  the true number of annual perinatal infections may be 10-20 
                  times higher, the researchers noted as background. These infections 
                  may occur as a result of various errors including lack of maternal 
                  prenatal hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) testing and reporting, 
                  failure to test all women who are admitted to delivery hospitals 
                  without prenatal HBsAg test results, lapses in reporting and 
                  documentation of test results in maternal and newborn medical 
                  records, and failure to administer timely post-exposure prophylaxis. 
                  
                  
                  In March 2006, the investigators sent a policy survey to nursing 
                  supervisors or clinical nurse managers of childbirth departments 
                  at a representative sample of 242 delivery hospitals in the 
                  50 states, Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico that oversaw at least 
                  100 births per year. They also review paired mother-infant medical 
                  records for 25 consecutive live births between October 2005 
                  and March 2006. 
                  
                  Results
                
                   
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                    190 
                      of the 242 hospitals (78.5%) responded to the survey and 
                      provided medical records for 4762 mothers and 4786 infants. 
                       
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                    63.0% 
                      to 80.6% of surveyed hospitals reported having various policies 
                      related to infant hepatitis B prevention: | 
                  
                   
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                          63.0% 
                            screened pregnant women for HBV upon admission if 
                            they had no existing known test result. | 
                         
                         
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                          67.0% 
                            had a policy requiring HBV vaccination of all newborns 
                            before hospital discharge; | 
                         
                         
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                          77.2% 
                            had a policy to administer HBIG to infants born to 
                            mothers with HBV; | 
                         
                         
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                          80.6% 
                            had a policy to give the HBV vaccine to infants born 
                            mothers with hepatitis B. | 
                         
                       
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                    18 
                      women had a documented positive prenatal HBsAg test and 
                      3 tested positive upon hospital admission (combined prevalence 
                      0.9%). | 
                  
                   
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                    62.1% 
                      of infants born to the 18 women with positive HBsAg prenatal 
                      tests received both the HBV vaccine and HBIG within 12 hours 
                      after birth. | 
                  
                   
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                    However, 
                      13.7% of these eligible infants were not vaccinated and 
                      19.7% did not receive HBIG before hospital discharge.  | 
                  
                   
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                    Among 
                      infants born to 320 women with unknown HBsAg status, 52.4% 
                      were vaccinated within 12 hours after birth. | 
                  
                   
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                    Within 
                      this group of infants, 20.1% were not vaccinated before 
                      discharge.  | 
                  
                   
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                      Among infants born to mothers known to be HBsAg negative, 
                      69.1% received the hepatitis B vaccine before hospital discharge. | 
                  
                   
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                    Overall, 
                      68.7% of infants received the first dose of hepatitis B 
                      vaccine at birth. | 
                  
                   
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                    The 
                      strongest predictor of vaccine administration was having 
                      a written hospital policy for newborn hepatitis B vaccination. 
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                "Given 
                  the existence of highly effective PEP, perinatal HBV transmission 
                  can be almost entirely prevented, but gaps in the delivery hospital 
                  prevention policies and practices persist," the study authors 
                  concluded. " Universal newborn hepatitis B vaccination, 
                  together with timely administration of appropriate prophylaxis 
                  to infants who are born to HBsAg-positive women and women of 
                  unknown HBsAg status, are essential hospital clinical practices 
                  for preventing perinatal HBV infections."
                "Efforts 
                  to avoid medical errors through appropriate implementation and 
                  monitoring of hospital practices are needed to eliminate perinatal 
                  HBV transmission," they added.
                  
                  Immunization Services Division and Global Immunization Division, 
                  National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers 
                  for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, GA; National 
                  Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention, 
                  Division of Viral Hepatitis, CDC, Atlanta, GA.
                4/13/10
                Reference
                  BC Willis, P Wortley, SA Wang, and others. Gaps in hospital 
                  policies and practices to prevent perinatal transmission of 
                  hepatitis B virus. Pediatrics 125(4): 704-711 (Free 
                  full text). April 2010.