my friend, don't worry. At first, you should make an appointment with doc for treatment. When surface antigen is active, you are contagious. You should prevent it from being transmitted to others. This is moral. If you r immigrant, u r ok. nothing to do with work or becoming a citzenship. U have right to be sick.
So if u didn't report it when you submitted your medical results during the application, i think u know what u should say now. Any medical treatment remain same, and hope you get treatment, health is the most important, esp. Hepatitis B, watch out!
Correction: surface antigen (HBsAg) only tells you that you are a carrier and you ARE infected. 5 D4 U! q% y$ |$ i& n' M
If you also have positive HBeAg, you are highly contagious. But if you have negative HBeAg, you still can pass the disease to others via sexual relation, needles or even saliva. 8 w; t9 D1 K! D( A( ~# s/ p
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Best regards.
i had the same experience. Even worse, i told my doctor that I had contracted the diease for 3 years. Last month, my doctor told me that some sort of committee would probably telephone me for a talk. But so far i have not gotten any call . My question is: does it really seriously affect my application of Canadian citizenship? Does the committee report the case to any governmental department?
C'est une maladie a declaration obligatoire (MADO). C'est certain que les travailleurs de la sante publiquee aimeraient savoir qui sont infectes ou qui sont a risque pour MIEUX PROTEGER LE PUBLIC. ( X( H; j0 [; J9 z/ d& ?Et voila.