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HEPATITIS B: The Silent Infection That Can Begin in a Barbershop or a Bedroom

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By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu

HEPATITIS B: The Silent Infection That Can Begin in a Barbershop or a Bedroom

“I only went for a haircut.” Chinedu, 27, says it like something small, almost forgettable. A routine afternoon, a busy Lagos barbershop, and clippers moving from one head to another without pause.

“I didn’t think anything was wrong. Everyone uses the same tools,” he added. He left the chair looking fresh. He left the shop unaware.

Months later, a routine test returned a result that did not match how ordinary his life felt: Hepatitis B.

No dramatic moment marked the beginning. No visible warning. Just a quiet shift in his health story that no one could trace to a single point in time.

That uncertainty is exactly what health experts say makes Hepatitis B dangerous.

Aproko Doctor, the Nigerian health advocate known for blunt public health warnings, has repeatedly cautioned that shared clippers, razors, and other sharp grooming tools can carry infected blood if not properly disinfected.

His message is simple and unsettling: what looks clean is not always safe.

But global health authorities say the risk does not end in the barbershop.

The World Health Organization explains that Hepatitis B spreads through infected blood and body fluids, including semen and vaginal fluids, and can be transmitted through sexual contact as well as contaminated sharp instruments.

More than 250 million people worldwide are estimated to be living with chronic infection. (who.int)

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention adds that the virus spreads when blood, semen, or other body fluids from an infected person enter the body of someone who is not protected.

It also warns that many people carry the virus without symptoms, unknowingly passing it on. (cdc.gov)

That is where the second silence begins. A woman who has never shared a clipper, never stepped into a barbershop, and never touched a razor can still be exposed through unprotected sex with an infected partner.

Health experts emphasize that sexual transmission remains one of the major global routes of infection.

Dr. Meg Doherty, Director of WHO’s Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Programmes, has highlighted that millions of people living with viral hepatitis are unaware of their status.

That hidden burden, she notes, is what keeps transmission chains alive across communities.

Doctors describe Hepatitis B as a quiet traveller, one that does not always announce itself with symptoms, but moves steadily through everyday contact, unnoticed.

Doctors say Hepatitis B often stays quiet for weeks, months, or even years. When symptoms do appear, they may be mild at first and easy to ignore.

These can include fatigue that feels unusual or persistent, mild fever, loss of appetite, nausea, or discomfort around the upper right side of the abdomen where the liver sits.

In some cases, people may notice dark urine, pale stool, or yellowing of the eyes and skin (jaundice).

Health experts warn that many people never notice symptoms in the early stage, which is why testing is often the only way to confirm infection.

Global health authorities are consistent on prevention:
Vaccination remains the strongest protection, strongly recommended by WHO and CDC for infants, unvaccinated adults, and people at risk.

Avoid sharing items that may carry traces of blood, including clippers, razors, and toothbrushes.

Ensure barbers and salons properly sterilise equipment between clients.

Practice safe sex, including condom use and awareness of partner health status.

Get tested when exposed or uncertain, because early detection changes outcomes.

WHO describes vaccination as one of the most powerful tools in preventing infection and reducing long-term liver damage.

The quiet truth. Hepatitis B rarely begins with noise. It does not announce itself the moment it enters a body.

Sometimes it begins with a haircut. Sometimes it begins in intimacy. Sometimes it begins in trust that was never questioned.

And because it moves without spectacle, many people only meet it years later, when silence has already done its work.

The danger is not only in what touches the skin. It is in what feels too ordinary to question.

And by the time the body finally speaks, the story is often no longer about where it started. It is about how long it was already there, unseen.

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