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Hepatitis D
Hepatitis D
Statutory notification
Hepatitis D is a notifiable infectious disease in Western Australia.
See
notifiable communicable disease case definitions (Word 1.29MB)
.
Notifications should be made using the communicable disease notification form for
metropolitan residents (PDF 209KB)
or
regional residents (PDF 208KB)
.
For notification of regional residents see contact details of
public health units
.
See also description of
statutory medical notifications in Western Australia
.
Public health management
Important information
Infectious agent
: Hepatitis D virus.
Transmission
: Hepatitis D is usually passed on through direct contact with infected blood and blood products. Sexual transmission may also occur.
Incubation period
: Approximately 2 to 8 weeks.
Infectious period
: From weeks before to months after onset. Long-term carriers may be infectious for life.
Case exclusion
: Do not exclude.
Contact exclusion
: Do not exclude.
Treatment
: As recommended by the
Guidelines for Managing Sexually Transmitted Infections - WA
.
Immunisation
: Vaccination against hepatitis B prevents hepatitis D infection. Recommended that children be vaccinated for hepatitis B according to the
Western Australian immunisation schedule
. Hepatitis B vaccination also recommended for household contacts of people with chronic hepatitis B, occupational and other high-risk groups according to the
Guidelines for Managing Sexually Transmitted Infections - WA
.
Case follow-up
: Is the responsibility of health care providers.
Guidelines
Guidelines for Managing Sexually Transmitted Infections - WA
WA STI/HIV Control Supplement for endemic regions
Western Australian immunisation schedule
Australian Immunisation Handbook, Department of Health – Hepatitis B (external site)
OD 0394/12 Policy for Health Care Workers known to be Infected with Blood-borne Viruses (external site)
OD 0641/15 Management of Occupational Exposures to Blood or Body Fluids in the Healthcare Setting (external site)
OD 0237/09 Hepatitis B Vaccination Program (external site)
OD 0392/12 Guidelines for the Provision of Hepatitis A and B Vaccine to Adults in Western Australia at Risk of Acquiring These Infections by Sexual Transmission and Injecting Drug Use (external site)
OD 0553/14 Provision of Sterile Needles and Syringes from Rural and Regional Hospitals to People Who Inject Drugs (external site)
OD 0554/14 The Operation and Maintenance of Needle and Syringe Vending Machines (NSVMS) (external site)
Skin Penetration Code of Practice (PDF 324KB)
Communicable Disease Guidelines for teachers, childcare workers, local government authorities and medical practitioners
Notifiable disease data and reports
Notifiable infectious disease dashboard
General infectious disease reports
Produced by
Public Health