Hepatitis A
July 2009
What is Hepatitis A?
Hepatitis A is one of the most common vaccine-preventable infections acquired during travel. It is a contagious liver disease that is easily spread from person to person or through eating food or drinking water contaminated with feces.
Depends on factors such as destination, duration and living conditions. Highest among those living in or visiting rural areas, and those who eat and drink in locations
with poor sanitation. Higher among travellers visiting areas where hepatitis A is endemic. Risk also exists for travellers going for short periods of time staying at luxury hotels or engaging in low risk activities such as attending conferences.
- Some people who are infected with hepatitis A have no symptoms.
- Mild cases can last from one to two weeks.
- Severe cases of hepatitis A can last several months.
- Severity increases with age.
- Not usually as serious as hepatitis B.
- On rare occasions, it can cause liver failure and death. Those with pre-existing chronic liver conditions are more at risk.
- Practice safe food and water precautions.
- Get vaccinated.
There is no medication to treat hepatitis A. People generally recover in four to six weeks, but in some cases may feel sick for several months.
Symptoms
- Can take from 15 to 50 days to occur (average 28 days).
- Young children usually only have mild symptoms and do not tend to develop severe disease. Children under six years of age do not usually show symptoms.
- Symptoms often start suddenly, and can include:
- fever
- fatigue
- loss of appetite
- nausea
- abdominal discomfort
- dark urine
- jaundice (yellowing of skin and whites of eyes)
- In more severe cases, hepatitis A can cause liver damage.
- On rare occasions, the disease can cause liver failure and death. Those with pre-existing chronic liver disease or recipients of a liver transplant are most at risk for this.
- Most people recover without consequences. Recovery generally takes about four to six weeks, but can take months.
Transmission
- Hepatitis A is spread from person to person contact or through eating food or drinking water that is contaminated with feces from someone with the virus.
- Eating raw or undercooked shellfish.
- Infection with the virus gives life long immunity (protection) against the virus.
Where is Hepatitis A is a concern?
- Worldwide but most common in regions with poor food and water hygiene.
- Regions where there is a high risk of hepatitis A transmission include:
- Indian sub-continent (especially India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal)
- Africa
- the Middle East
- parts of the far east (excluding Japan)
- Central and South America
- Mexico
A map on countries and areas of risk for Hepatitis A is available on the World Health Organization website .
Related Travel Health Notices
None
Recommendations for Travellers
1. Practice safe food and water precautions
- Boil it, cook it, peel it or leave it!
- Always wash your hands before eating and drinking.
- Eat only food that has been well cooked and is still hot when served. Avoid uncooked foods, especially shellfish and salads.
- eat hot food hot and cold foods cold
- Drink and use ice from only purified water that has been boiled or disinfected with chlorine or iodine, or commercially bottled water in sealed containers. Carbonated drinks, including beer, are usually safe.
- Avoid unpasteurized dairy products.
- Avoid food from street vendors.
- Avoid swimming in polluted or contaminated water.
- Brush your teeth with purified or bottled water.
2. Get vaccinated
You should get vaccinated if you are:
- travelling to countries where Hepatitis A occurs; and
- visiting areas where drinking water may be unsafe and poor sanitation and hygiene conditions exist.
Don't Forget …
- Consult a doctor, nurse or health care provider or visit a travel health clinic at least six weeks before you travel.
- What to do if you get sick when you are travelling.
- What to do if you get sick after you return to Canada.
- Know what vaccines you need and when to get them.
Other Related Information
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