The vast majority of high-risk HPV viruses do not cause infection if they are touched by hand. High-risk HPV viruses are mainly parasitic in the local mucosal tissue of the human cervix and can cause symptoms of infection. If you touch the low-risk HPV virus infection with your hands, it is possible that you will be infected. It is recommended to pay attention to personal hygiene in daily life, such as towels and bath towels used especially in public places, which may also have low-risk HPV virus infection, and if they come into contact with the skin, it may lead to superfluous skin mucosa, so they should be disinfected regularly and scalded with boiling water and dried in the sun to avoid this virus infection. If you’ve got a viral infection, if it’s HPV6 or HPV11, it can cause warts on the mucous membrane tissue, so you need to be actively treated.