No, not at this point in time.
No, of course not.
yes
Louis Pasteur was instrumental in finding vaccines for diseases. He did not have any diseases himself
Noninfectious diseases are caused by factors such as genetics, lifestyle choices (e.g. diet, exercise, smoking), environmental factors (e.g. pollution, radiation), and aging. These diseases develop over time and are not spread from person to person like infectious diseases. Examples of noninfectious diseases include heart disease, cancer, and diabetes.
Examples of long-lasting noninfectious diseases include diabetes, hypertension, asthma, arthritis, and certain types of cancer. These conditions are typically chronic and can require ongoing management and treatment to control symptoms and prevent complications.
Cardiovascular disease, Diabetes, Malnutrition, Cancer
Infectious diseases involve a causative organism, from groups such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, and such. Noninfectious diseases involve causes other than specific infectious organisms.
infectious diseases involve a causative organism, from groups such as bacteria, viruses, fungi and such. Noninfectious diseases are not caused by a specific infectious organism. You get an infective disease from a bacteria or a virus or even a fungus. Other diseases are not caused by these but by other things. For example: cancer.
Vaccines don't kill viruses or diseases; they prevent disease before you are infected.
Vaccines prevent diseases, medications treat them.
Currently, all vaccines on the market today only exist for diseases caused by viruses- though not all diseases caused by viruses have a corresponding vaccine. Notably, the common cold (rhinoviruses) and AIDS (HIV) have no vaccines.
Infectious diseases are diseases that others can get from you either by touching the infected area, breathing the infected air, or touching items that you or the infected area have touched. Noninfectious diseases mean others cannot get the disease from you in any manner.