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Scarlet fever is highly contagious when the patient is in the early stages and is not being treated with antibiotics. It is spread by sneezing , coughing, or direct contact with an infected person.
Scarlet Fever can be spread by just being in contact with a infected person. If they cough or sneeze into the air the bacteria will go everywhere, drinking from the same cup or eating off the same plate is also really bad, Unfortunately, these attacks are random.Second answer: Scarlet fever "preys" on children, particularly in school, however, an adult can contract the disease. It is spread through direct contact and the merest droplet exhaled from the infected person. It is a disease that has to be quarantined and can be treated with antibiotic.
it can be treated with high doses of antibiotics. it can be prevented by not touching the infected person
A chickenpox "carrier" is someone who is infected with chickenpox but does not have symptoms. Anyone susceptible to chickenpox can be a chickenpox carrier. Someone who had the vaccine is unlikely to be infected with and carry chickenpox.
bacteria called erythrogenic exotoxin invade your body through breathing in air-borne droplets from an infected person's sneeze, direct contact with an infected person, or by touching something that an infected person has touched.
they suck a person blood who is infected and then bite someone who is healthy
The only way someone can get infected by kissing is if the infected person they kissed has an open wound or sore in their mouth.
You can't get chlamydia from sitting right behind an infected person. Chlamydia is spread by sexual contact with someone who's infected. You can get it from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
You can't get HIV just from sharing a bathtub or pool with someone who is infected.
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Close physical contact, such as sitting near someone or sleeping near someone who has HIV is not a route of transmission. A person's bodily fluids must have contact with the infected person's bodily fluids (ex. semen, vaginal fluids or blood), in order for transmission to occur.