Mode of transmission of hepatitis C: mother-to-child, blood and sexual transmission The main modes of transmission of hepatitis C are mother-to-child, blood and sexual transmission and transmission from some irregular medical cosmetic procedures. Because hepatitis C has few clinical manifestations during the chronic hepatitis stage, it is difficult to be detected, and most patients are detected only through physical examination. The early symptoms of hepatitis C patients in general are loss of appetite, rough skin, yellow eyes, yellow skin, yellow urine, and pain in the liver area. Since the transmission of hepatitis C is basically similar to the transmission route of AIDS, if you belong to the high level of the population, you must be promptly checked and screened, generally within six months of infection is acute hepatitis C, about 50% to 85% of hepatitis C patients will turn chronic. Experts suggest that female patients who want to get pregnant should be cured of hepatitis C so that they can best prevent it. (The rate of mother-to-child transmission (of hepatitis C) is not as high as that of hepatitis B. It is only about 8%, although the pathway is the same, but it is still a different rate of transmission. Reporter: Can mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis C be blocked? The mother-to-child blockade of hepatitis C, because there is no immunoglobulin, there is no vaccine, so that you have to block is to cure the mother first, the mother-to-be is cured before pregnancy, so then you can prevent. Experts suggest that HIV prevention measures can also be effective in preventing hepatitis C, mainly including: refusing drugs, not sharing syringes, fixing sexual partners, using condoms correctly, not sharing personal items such as razors and toothbrushes, and dressing broken wounds in a timely manner, etc.