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You can get chlamydia from someone who is infected. The partner's cleanliness has nothing to do with it.
No she can not.
The requirements for partner tracing for chlamydia vary from one county to another. You can contact your county health department to inquire about their practices.
Yes, this is possible.
It is nearly impossible to get chlamydia without direct sexual contact. The only object that might spread it is a sex toy, if you're sharing while having sex with an infected partner. Chlamydia can only survive outside the body for a few minutes.
Yes, a female or a male partner may be first to have chlamydia. Although women have more reported cases of chlamydia, this fact is likely due to increased screening in women. Other studies screening men and women equally show that both genders are equally likely to have chlamydia.
You don't always get pregnant after having sex that first time and it doesn't happen when you want it. if you've had Chlamydia for a long period of time before you got the medicine the Chlamydia can also have made you sterile. Sadly, that is one of the side effects. And you two should not have unprotected sex while undergoing treatment.
No; it is not possible to get chlamydia from recurring UTI and Candida infections. You were exposed to the bacteria from a sexual partner.
As long as you don't transfer fluids from your finger to your eyes or genitals, you won't get chlamydia from fingering someone. However, you only need to abstain for seven days. For the sake of your health and that of your partner, find something else to do for this brief period of time.
No, it would not be safe to have the instrumentation in your cervix while you have chlamydia. For this reason, and to increase the rate of success, fertility treatment providers test for chlamydia before starting the IVF cycle. If you're infected, it will take just seven days to cure you and your partner, so the delay will be brief.
No, you can't get chlamydia from a chair. It's spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex with an infected partner, or genital-genital contact with someone infected. Also, a baby born to a mother with chlamydia can get chlamydia during birth.
Possibly; many states have laws about disclosure of STDs to your partner.