The best management of hemolytic jaundice is

There is no optimal treatment for hemolytic jaundice. Generally, hemolytic jaundice can be treated with phototherapy, blood transfusion, and disease treatment. 1. Phototherapy: Exposure of the child to light with a wavelength of 440nm can lower serum bilirubin and prevent the occurrence of nuclear jaundice. If kernicterus jaundice has already occurred, it can make its recovery faster. When bilirubin is irradiated by this light, it is photo-oxidized to a colorless substance and excreted from urine and bile. 2. Blood transfusion: If serum indirect bilirubin exceeds 20 mg/dl (342 mol/L), a blood transfusion is required. The donor must first undergo a screening test for G6PD deficiency and must be a blood donor without G6PD deficiency to avoid exacerbation of the condition and jaundice after the transfusion and to avoid blood donations from relatives. If jaundice is not serious, blood transfusion is not needed. 3. Disease treatment: firstly, eliminate the cause of the disease (e.g. malaria-induced erythrocyte damage needs to be corrected by radical treatment), remove the causative factors (e.g. patients with G-6-PD deficiency should avoid consuming fava beans and using medicines with oxidizing properties), and treat the symptoms (e.g. use of adrenal cortical hormone and plasma exchange to treat autoimmune hemolytic anemia). Secondly, clinically, commonly used in the treatment of jaundice with symptomatic treatment such as gardenia jasminoides, butanedisulfonic acid adenosylmethionine and so on. Hemolytic jaundice patients should go to the hospital in time for examination, and under the guidance of the doctor for medication and treatment.