# Living with a partner or family member who has hepatitis B

URL: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/articles/living-with-a-partner-or-family-member-who-has-hepatitis-b?locale=en
Canonical Markdown: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/articles/living-with-a-partner-or-family-member-who-has-hepatitis-b.md?locale=en
Language: en
Translation key: living-with-a-partner-or-family-member-who-has-hepatitis-b
Topic: 伴侣与家庭
Audience: Patients and families
Region: Global
Published: 2026-06-26
Last reviewed: 2026-06-26
Review status: source_backed
Tags: 家庭, 预防, 疫苗

## Summary

What everyday contact does not spread hepatitis B, what blood exposure means, and how vaccinated family members can keep prevention practical.

## Article

## Everyday contact usually does not spread hepatitis B

Hepatitis B is not spread through hugging, shaking hands, eating together, coughing, sneezing, ordinary shared dishes, food, or water. Family members do not need to isolate someone because of ordinary household contact.

## If family members or partners are vaccinated, what still matters

Hepatitis B vaccination is an important way to prevent HBV. If a partner or family member has completed the vaccine series and testing shows anti-HBs at a protective level, eating together, hugging, living together, sharing toilets, doing laundry, and ordinary child care usually do not require extra isolation.

But vaccinated does not always mean confirmed immune. If the vaccine series is uncertain or the anti-HBs result is unknown, bring vaccine records and lab reports to a clinician and ask whether HBV serology should be checked. Sexual partners should discuss screening, vaccination, and condom use with a clinician until immunity is confirmed.

Even when family members have immunity, keep basic blood-exposure habits at home. Do not share toothbrushes, razors, or nail clippers. Cover wounds promptly. Wear gloves or avoid bare-hand contact when handling blood or blood-stained items. These habits reduce risk from hepatitis B and other bloodborne infections.

## What blood exposure means

Blood exposure means blood that may contain HBV, or body fluid that may be mixed with blood, entering another person&#39;s body through broken skin, an open wound, a needle stick, or mucous membranes such as the eyes or mouth. The amount can be tiny and not obvious to the eye.

Common household examples include sharing razors, toothbrushes, or nail clippers that may carry small amounts of blood; touching someone else&#39;s bleeding wound with bare hands; being injured by a blood-contaminated needle or sharp object; or using unsterilized tools for piercing, tattooing, acupuncture, manicures, or medical or dental procedures.

## How to avoid blood exposure

Each person should have their own toothbrush, razor, nail clipper, earrings, and body jewelry. When handling wounds or blood spots, use disposable gloves if possible. Clean and cover wounds. Wrap bloody tissues, gauze, and disposable items before throwing them away. Clean blood spots without bare-hand contact and follow the directions on household cleaning products.

Do not share injection equipment or any tool that pierces the skin. Choose tattoo, piercing, acupuncture, manicure, medical, and dental services that use disposable needles or properly sterilized instruments.

## Screening and vaccination for family members and partners

Sex partners, household members, and caregivers can discuss an HBV panel or serology with a clinician. If there is no evidence of immunity, hepatitis B vaccination is usually an important prevention step. If a needle stick or blood contact with an open wound or mucous membrane occurs, contact a clinician or public health service promptly, even if vaccination was done before. Bring vaccine records and previous anti-HBs results and ask whether post-exposure care or repeat testing is needed.

## Action checklist

Confirm whether partners and family members completed the hepatitis B vaccine series. Save anti-HBs results. Do not isolate people for everyday meals, hugging, or living together. Keep toothbrushes, razors, nail clippers, and other items that may carry blood separate. After a needle stick, blood contact with a mucous membrane, or blood contact with an open wound, ask a clinician promptly about post-exposure care.

## References

1. WHO Hepatitis B Fact Sheet
   Organization: World Health Organization
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/who-hepatitis-b-fact-sheet?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/hepatitis-b
   Source type: fact_sheet
   Accessed: 2026-06-26
2. CDC Hepatitis B Prevention and Control
   Organization: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/cdc-hepatitis-b-prevention-and-control?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis-b/prevention/index.html
   Source type: fact_sheet
   Accessed: 2026-06-26
3. Hepatitis B Foundation Transmission
   Organization: Hepatitis B Foundation
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/hepatitis-b-foundation-transmission?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.hepb.org/prevention-and-diagnosis/transmission/
   Source type: patient_resource
   Accessed: 2026-06-26

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