It depends on your location and if you are going to get it from your doctor or the health department. The health department is usually cheapter than the doctors office. There are 3 serious to the shot. You take the first one, wait 6 weeks and get the second one, then so many months later you get the last one. I paid 45 dollars a piece for mine. I got mine at the health department since it was cheapter there then the doctor's office. Hope this helps you out.
Yes, you can eat before receiving a Hepatitis B vaccination.
No. It's not a live vaccine.
no
0.5ml of vaccine to be given either im /s.c at every single shot of hepatitis B vaccination .
Yes, hepatitis shots are recommended for newborns as part of their vaccination schedule to protect them from hepatitis B virus.
Yes, it is recommended that babies receive the Hepatitis B vaccination to protect them from the virus.
Dead and it cannot cause infection. It is a subunit vaccine.
There is no vaccination available for hepatitis C as of early 2015.
Vaccines for hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and yellow fever can prevent jaundice due to viral infection.
Because there is a great deal of blood exposure involved in dialysis treatment, a slight risk of contracting hepatitis B and hepatitis C exists
No it is not. There are at least 3 shots; possibly 4.
Hepatitis C and hepatitis E have no vaccine to prevent the disease. Although there is no vaccine to prevent hepatitis D, you can only get this type if you're also infected with type B. Therefore, hepatitis B vaccine indirectly prevents hepatitis D.