Can high-risk HPV56 be passed on to a child?

It is very unlikely that high-risk HPV56 can be transmitted to children. HPV virus can be divided into high-risk human papillomavirus and low-risk human papillomavirus, of which high-risk human papillomavirus is mainly likely to induce cervical lesions in women, leading to cervical cancer, although contagious, but generally also through sexual transmission, the possibility of transmission to the child may not be very large, but if the child shared baths, hot springs there is the possibility of transmission, this probability is very low. High-risk HPV56 is mainly transmitted through direct sexual contact and can also be transmitted from mother to child. Infantile HPV or laryngeal papillomatosis and HPV in children may be contracted by the fetus passing through the HPV-infected birth canal during labor or by close contact with the mother after birth. People with HPV infection are advised to pay attention to the details of daily life, personal hygiene, protection of family members, and timely medical treatment.