
What to know about the hep B vaccine
What to know about the hep B vaccine
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. posts endorsement of measles MMR vaccine on X
Health and Human Services secretary, and vaccine skeptic, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. supports measles vaccine after visiting West Texas.
Hepatitis B is a liver infection that inflames the organ and impacts its ability to function. It can be either acute (short-term) or chronic (long-term), and is estimated to impact between 880,000 and 1.89 million people in the United States.
Those who leave chronic hepatitis B untreated have a 25% to 40% risk of developing liver cancer at some point in their lives, according to the Hepatitis B Foundation.
The good news: There's a vaccine for hepatitis B that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), can help to prevent millions of deaths worldwide. The bad news: Only about 1/3 of American adults are currently vaccinated.
"Vaccines are safe, effective and save lives," says Dr. Jennifer Brull, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP). "They are one of our best tools to prevent severe illness, hospitalizations and death in our communities. ... Being vaccinated against diseases helps build a community of immunity and protects those more vulnerable to disease who may not be able to get vaccinated."
Here's what health experts want you to know about hepatitis B and how vaccinations can help prevent its spread.
Elsewhere in vaccines: What experts need you to know about the MMR vaccine
What is hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is a contagious liver infection that's transmitted through blood, semen or another type of bodily fluid from a person who's infected with the virus, according to the CDC.
The severity can range from a "mild, short-term, acute illness lasting a few weeks to a serious, long-term, chronic infection," the CDC adds. Those at higher risk include healthcare workers, drug users, travelers in areas where the infection is widespread and people who have multiple sex partners.
"The best way to prevent hepatitis B is to always have protected sex – use a condom – and, if you use intravenous IV drugs, avoid sharing needles," Brull says.
Plus: "Preventing perinatal hepatitis B is important because most people with hepatitis B got infected as infants or young children when their immune systems were not fully developed," according to the CDC.
What is Tdap? Here's what you need to know to stay protected against whooping cough
Is there a vaccine for hep B?
Yes, there is a vaccine for hepatitis B; it's usually administered in a series of two to three shots over the course of six months, which provides long-term protection.
The CDC recognizes the hepatitis B vaccine as the best way to prevent getting infected and recommends it to essentially any age group that hasn't been vaccinated yet: infants, children and adolescents under 19, adults 19 to 59 and adults 60 and older with risk factors for hepatitis B. It's also safe to receive while pregnant.
Vaccines as a whole work by imitating an infection to teach the body how to recognize and defend itself from disease without experiencing the dangers of an actual infection, according to the CDC.
"They do so by exposing the body to an active ingredient called an antigen which triggers an immune response," Brull says. Depending on the vaccine, "this immune response can protect you for many years or your entire life."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
20 Million Eggs Pulled from Shelves After CDC Traces Deadly Bacteria to California Facility
The CDC has linked a multistate Salmonella Enteritidis outbreak to eggs distributed by August Egg Company, resulting in 79 confirmed illnesses, including 61 hospitalizations, across seven states, with additional cases likely unreported. On June 6, August Egg Company recalled 20.4 million eggs sold under multiple brand names in major retailers across nine states between February and May 2025. Recalled egg cartons are identified by plant codes P-6562 or CA5330 and should be returned to the place of purchase for a full refund. Consumers are warned that infected individuals may experience severe symptoms, particularly those with weakened immune Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has identified the source of a multistate Salmonella outbreak that has sickened dozens of Americans. On June 6, the agency stated that its traceback data indicates that eggs "distributed by August Egg Company may be contaminated with Salmonella Enteritidis and may be making people sick." As of June 5, 79 people have been confirmed to have contracted the specific strain of Salmonella from eggs across seven states. Six of the infected individuals had traveled to either California or Nevada in the week leading up to their illness, and 61 of those affected required hospitalization. The CDC noted that the illnesses were reported between Feb. 24, 2025, and May 17, 2025. However, it added that the "true number of sick people in this outbreak was likely much higher than the number reported, and this outbreak may not have been limited to the states with known illnesses." This, it noted, is because many infected people recover without the need for medical intervention. Also on June 6, the August Egg Company issued a recall for 1,700,000 dozen (or 20,400,000) brown cage-free and brown certified organic eggs. The recall noted that "healthy persons infected with Salmonella often experience fever, diarrhea (which may be bloody), nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain," though in rare circumstances, infection "can result in the organism getting into the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections (i.e., infected aneurysms), endocarditis, and arthritis." Individuals with weakened immune systems are particularly susceptible to illness. Related: Hospitalizations and Deaths From Contaminated Food Doubled in 2024 — Here's Everything You Need to Know The recall stated that a set of eggs was distributed in California and Nevada between February 3 and May 15, with all featuring a sell-by date between March 4, 2025, and June 4, 2025. These eggs were available at Save Mart, FoodMaxx, Lucky, Smart & Final, Safeway, Raley's, Food 4 Less, and Ralphs. Another set of eggs was also distributed between February 3 and May 6, with sell-by dates ranging from March 4, 2025, to June 19, 2025, to Walmart locations in California, Washington, Nevada, Arizona, Wyoming, New Mexico, Nebraska, Indiana, and Illinois. All of the recalled egg cartons or packages include a plant code number P-6562 or CA5330. The eggs were also sold under various brand names, including Clover Organic, First Street, Nulaid, O Organics, Marketside, Raley's, Simple Truth, Sun Harvest, and Sunnyside. 'It is important to know that when our processing plant identified this concern, we immediately began diverting all eggs from the plant to an egg-breaking facility, which pasteurizes the eggs and kills any pathogens," the company shared in the recall notice. 'August Egg Company's internal food safety team is also conducting its own stringent review to identify what measures can be established to prevent this situation from recurring. We are committed to addressing this matter fully and to implementing all necessary corrective actions to ensure this does not happen again.' It added that any consumer who has purchased the recalled eggs should return them to their place of purchase for a full product: August Egg Company eggsNumber of eggs recalled: 1,700,000 dozen or 20,400,000 individual eggsReason for recall: Potential Salmonella contaminationStates affected: California, Washington, Nevada, Arizona, Wyoming, New Mexico, Nebraska, Indiana, and IllinoisNumber of illnesses: 79 confirmed cases, including 61 hospitalizationsRead the original article on Food & Wine

an hour ago
What to know about rare brain-eating amoeba after Texas woman dies
A Texas woman has died from a rare brain-eating amoeba after using a sinus rinse with contaminated water, according to a case report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The 71-year-old woman -- who was previously healthy -- used tap water at a campground in a nasal irrigation device, and health officials believe this is how she contracted the amoeba, the report states. She developed a brain infection known as primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) and died eight days after symptoms began, according to the report. Other details about the patient including name, race/ethnicity or town of residence were not provided in the report. Here's what to know about the rare, but often fatal, disease. Naegleria fowleri (N. fowleri) is an amoeba, which is an organism so small it can only be seen with a microscope. It lives in soil and freshwater ponds, lakes, rivers and hot springs, according to the CDC. It is rarely found in swimming pools, splash pads and tap water. Most infections with N. fowleri occur when people swim in contaminated water and submerge their heads, causing the amoeba to enter the nose. People cannot be infected if they swallow contaminated water, and they cannot spread the amoeba to others, the federal health agency said. N. fowleri is known as a " brain-eating amoeba" because it can infect the brain, causing a disease known as PAM, according to the CDC. PAM also can occur when people use contaminated tap water to "cleanse their noses during religious practices" or "irrigate their sinuses," the latter of which occurred with the Texas woman in the CDC case report. Symptoms typically begin five days after exposure but can occur anywhere from one to 12 days after infection, according to the CDC. Early symptoms resemble those of bacterial meningitis and can include headache, nausea, vomiting and fever. PAM can progress to more severe symptoms such as neck stiffness, seizures, hallucinations, altered mental state and coma. The disease progresses quickly because a diagnosis is hard to confirm. PAM is almost always fatal, occurring in 97% of cases and, on average, five days after symptoms begin. If PAM is caught early enough, it can be treated with a combination of drugs including antifungal medications, and sometimes antibiotics, the CDC said. Fewer than 10 people in the U.S. every year develop PAM, according to the CDC. Between 1962 and 2023, there have been 164 reported cases of PAM in the U.S. with just four survivors, the federal health agency said.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Why Is Elon Musk Tweeting About Me at 3 A.M.?
If elected, I would be the poorest member of Congress—and the world's richest man just attacked me in a 3:00 am tweet for supporting universal healthcare. You might have seen a clip of me on CNN last week, debating with Scott Jennings on whether healthcare is a basic human right. In that clip, Jennings—a long-time Republican strategist and pro-Trump contributor at CNN—asks, 'Even illegals?' To which I respond, 'Every single person in the world deserves healthcare... How is this controversial?' It shouldn't be controversial. And I'm not afraid to say that as a person or as a congressional candidate. The state of our country's healthcare has been front and center for many Americans over the last few weeks, as President Trump's so-called 'Big Beautiful Bill' threatens healthcare coverage for 11 million people—including thousands of families right here in Illinois' Ninth Congressional District, where I am running. Why? So Republicans can slash taxes for the ultra-rich, decimate oversight for AI, and spend $125 billion on a 'Golden Dome' which will make America less safe – all for the low, low price of workers' health, food, and clean air. Our healthcare system is one of the worst in the developed world. Medical debt is the cause of 66% of bankruptcies in the US. In Canada, the runner up in this bleak competition, that number is 19%. We spend more on healthcare than any other wealthy country and yet have the worst outcomes. We take Ubers instead of ambulances, take fish antibiotics instead of prescriptions, and often skip medical treatment altogether because of the expected cost. These hardships are uniquely American. In 1944, Franklin Delano Roosevelt proposed a Second Bill of Rights to Congress, encouraging legislators to enshrine into law additional rights not already enumerated in the Constitution. His proposals were prescient, reflecting trials many Americans face today: the right to earn a decent living, the right to trade free of monopolies, the right to education. He also said that every American should be guaranteed 'the right to medical care and the opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health.' Congress did not pass it. It's been more than 80 years since FDR proposed his Second Bill of Rights and healthcare is still not a legal right for any American. While the Affordable Care Act made progress on this front, treatment and prescription costs are still expensive, insurance bureaucracy is still predatory, and most Americans' coverage is still tied to their employment. I lost my own health insurance for over a year when I was laid off last May. Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' would continue the death by a thousand cuts approach to the ACA that Republicans have pushed every time they're in power. Donald Trump and the Republicans want to make this worse. By creating even more hoops for Americans to jump through just to get care that is often lackluster, by demonizing the poor, and by insisting healthcare is something you must earn, this administration is bragging about its own inhumanity. When I said, 'Every person in the world deserves healthcare,' Jennings couldn't fathom that idea. His first instinct was to blurt out, 'Even illegals?' The answer is yes. If you are a person, you deserve healthcare, no matter where you are or who you are. No one deserves to die because they can't afford insulin or because they're too scared of bankruptcy to seek medical attention. If you show up at my doorstep starving or injured, I am not going to ask for papers before I help you. Conservatives struggle with this idea. Elon Musk seems to think this idea and my comments are 'suicidal empathy.' Illinois Republicans were so incensed that my campaign office stocks food, clothes, and other resources for whoever needs them, that they thought I was somehow breaking the law. But in most other wealthy countries, this mindset is barbaric. In much of the rest of the world, if you need care, you get it. In fact, I have needed to see an emergency doctor in three foreign countries since I was a kid and all of those visits cost less than any urgent care clinic visit I've had in the United States. But when you say any of this, the Republican instinct is to ask, 'How will we pay for this?' The answer is pretty simple and we've known it for a long time. Universal, single-payer healthcare—a system where our tax dollars pay for our healthcare without the private insurance middleman—would actually save us money and lead to better health outcomes. We save lives, reduce waste, and guarantee a baseline of human dignity. Of course, predatory insurance companies would lose the ability to profit off of our basic existence, but that's a sacrifice we should all be willing to make. One of the main reasons I'm running for Congress is because our leaders have conditioned us into thinking we don't deserve good things, especially if we aren't rich. But we do. You do. Every American deserves to afford housing, groceries, and healthcare with money left over to save and spend. We deserve to thrive, not just survive. And every single human being in every single country deserves to know that they can find the help they need on the worst day of their lives, when they are at their weakest and most vulnerable. For most Americans this concept isn't hard to grasp, but when it comes to Elon Musk and right-wing pundits, they simply can't fathom having even an ounce of basic humanity.