Can HIV be blocked for mother and baby

  AIDS is a terrible and harmful infectious disease. It mainly makes the body's immunity worse and makes the body lose its immune function, which is particularly vulnerable to other diseases. Can AIDS be blocked by mother and baby?

  

Can HIV be blocked for mother and baby1

  The main transmission routes of AIDS are: 1. blood transmission 2. mother to child transmission 3. sexual transmission. The time for early diagnosis of newborns of HIV infected pregnant women is to draw blood at six weeks and three months of birth, and the newborns are randomly checked at 18 months for AIDS virus antibody screening and necessary supplementary tests. Although the interruption of mother to child transmission of HIV in current medical science and technology has not yet reached the level of complete avoidance, the mother to child transmission of HIV can be greatly reduced through early inspection, drug treatment and attention not to invasive operations during childbirth.

  When a woman is diagnosed in the hospital after pregnancy, the hospital will carry out a series of blood tests, including AIDS screening. Once a pregnant woman is found to have AIDS, the doctor will tell the pregnant woman to decide whether to continue childbirth. If you choose to continue to give birth, the hospital will recommend antiviral drug intervention treatment to try to block mother to child transmission of AIDS. If there is no treatment intervention, the risk of HIV infection after birth can reach more than half, so pregnant women who receive full intervention treatment still have a good chance of giving birth to healthy babies.

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