Can taking antibiotic medication cause hepatitis B?

Taking antibiotic medicine will not cause hepatitis B. Antibiotics have nothing to do with hepatitis B, but care should be taken not to abuse antibiotics. Hepatitis B is an infectious disease caused by the infection of the body with the hepatitis B virus. The prerequisite for infection with hepatitis B is the opportunity to come into contact with the hepatitis B virus and, through a certain means of transmission, to infect susceptible people. If you have not been exposed to the pathogen, i.e., the hepatitis B virus, you will not be infected with hepatitis B. Antibiotics are usually used to treat bacterial infections in the body. Antibiotics do not contain the hepatitis B virus pathogen, so there is no correlation between the body’s taking of antibiotics and whether or not it has been infected with hepatitis B. It is worth noting that the misuse of antibiotics may lead to drug resistance and weakening of the resistance of the organism, so antibiotics should not be misused.