Some patients with jaundice who are asymptomatic and have no other test abnormalities do not need to be overly stressed. In general, congenital jaundice is due to a congenital lack of an enzyme or some functional defect in the liver that impairs the binding, transport, and excretion of bilirubin in some individuals. As a result, there is often chronic intermittent mild jaundice from early childhood. It may be deepened by exertion, emotional stress, and infection. There is malaise, dyspepsia and hepatic discomfort. Most patients have normal liver function in other items and the prognosis is mostly good, and the administration of sodium barbiturate is often effective. There is often a family history, and there are many types, such as chronic intermittent juvenile jaundice (GiberT disease), chronic idiopathic jaundice (Dubin-Johnson syndrome), chronic familial non-hemolytic jaundice (ROTOR syndrome), etc. There is no specific treatment, and the bilirubin level is usually not too high. What you need to take care of in your life is a proper diet and sleep. In your daily life, you need to pay attention to some factors that avoid harming your liver, such as excessive alcohol consumption and drugs. Check your liver function regularly. It is usually possible to have children. But the child born may suffer from the same disease. Be psychologically prepared.