A yeast infection is different from chlamydia. If your partner has both yeast and chlamydia, she could transmit chlamydia. If your partner has yeast, but not chlamydia, she can't transmit chlamydia.
A baby can have pneumonia due to chlamydia trachomatis, the bacteria that causes the STD known as chlamydia. This type of pneumonia is not normally spread from the baby to others.
A different bacteria, Chlamydia pneumonia, is a common cause of bronchitis and pneumonia, and can be contagious. It is spread through airborne transmission, not by sex.
Chlamydia is spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to an infected woman. If your touching doesn't fall into these categories, you won't get chlamydia.
You probably will not get chlamydia from an infected person if they bite you.
It's theoretically possible. You'd have to transfer a decent amount of infected fluids to get chlamydia that way.
If you touch your eye after touching the genitals of someone with chlamydia, you could infect your eyes.
Yes, chlamydia trachomatis can cause conjunctivitis. It's usually spread from someone touching their own infected genitals and then touching their eyes. Babies born to women infected with chlamydia can also get it.
No you can not.
Adults usually get chlamydia in their eyes by touching their genitals and then touching their eyes. Besides avoiding genital chlamydia infection, the other easy answer is to wash your hands after touching your genitals or those of a partner.
Chlamydia doesn't infect wounds. Chlamydia infects mucous membranes like the vagina, anus, and urethra.
You can't get chlamydia from drinking alcohol, even if you share a glass with someone who is infected. Chlamydia is spread by sexual contact with someone who is infected.
Chlamydia is not transmitted via casual contact.
You can't get chlamydia from talking to someone. You can get chlamydia from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected mother.
Yes. Dont scratch makes it worst.
Chlamydia is curable whether or not someone has HIV.
No, you get chlamydia from having sex with someone who has the germ.
You can't develop chlamydia on your own. You can only get the bacteria from someone who has it.