no
I don't believe that a person's religious views should affect their treatments of others. i think that it doesn't matter what a person's religious views are - everyone should be treated with respect.
Is there any possibility ,after pateint tretment ,patient is carrier from others?
Chronic hepatitis B refers to a long-term infection with the hepatitis B virus that can lead to liver inflammation and potentially serious complications such as cirrhosis or liver cancer. A carrier of hepatitis B, on the other hand, typically refers to a person who has the virus in their blood but does not exhibit symptoms or have active liver disease. Carriers can still transmit the virus to others, whereas chronic hepatitis B patients often require medical management to prevent disease progression.
HIV is the most infectious between the following blood borne pathogens; HIV, hepatitis b, hepatitis c.
Cirrhosis of the liver, of course this pertains only to alcohol disease.
Hepatitis is a liver disease which may be chronic or acute and it's usually caused by viral infection. So usually there are 5 hepatotropic viruses named Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, Hepatitis D, Hepatitis E and Hepatitis G, which affects the liver cells. The causes may lead to liver inflammation and other liver infections. To generate the better treatment opportunities for Hepatitis, Central BioHub offers 3500+ high-quality samples of Hepatitis A, B and C, on which researchers could perform the testing for producing treatment alternatives.
Persons with AIDS are 280 times more likely to get listeriosis than others.
It can put nice clothes on others.
Mostly people are either jealous of others clothes, or they think their clothes look stupid.
You probably mean "jaundice" (a condition caused by liver dysfunction - such as hepatitis, and many others).
Hepatitis can vary in transmissibility depending on the type. Hepatitis A and E are primarily spread through contaminated food and water, making them less transmissible in direct person-to-person contact. In contrast, Hepatitis B and C are highly transmissible through blood and bodily fluids, including sexual contact. Therefore, while some forms of hepatitis are highly transmissible, others are less so.
Hepatitis, all kinds, A, B, C and so on are viruses. They start from blood to blood contact with an infected carrier of the virus. Some viruses are much more virulent than others. You can recover nicely from Hepatitis A for instance, with treatment and even get vaccinated for Hepatitis A & B now but not C and above. They are forever although there are treatments there are as yet no 'cures'