Yes, you can get chlamydia immediately after or during treatment. Contact your health care provider for retreatment. Don't have sex until you and all partners have completed treatment.
No you can not catch chlamydia from hair.
Taking tablets for chlamydia won't stop it from occurring. There is no immunity built up in your body against chlamydia; if exposed you may still catch it again and again. On the other hand...if you just got exposed, and took medication immediately for chlamydia, you will prevent chlamydia from continuing, even if you haven't yet had symptoms or a positive test.
Chlamydia does not affect your pubic hair.
Yes, you can catch chlamydia from someone even if you're taking antibiotics when you have sex with that person.
If your boyfriend has chlamydia and has not had it treated keep him well away from you because you will get it if you have sex with him. If he has seen a doctor and had it cleared up then you should have nothing to worry about. Chlamydia is a serious illness and if left untreated can lead to mayor problem in health and and cause irreparable damage to your reproductive system. It is easily treated but it has to be treated and avoided. If you are not sure at least make him wear a condom to give you some sort of protection.
Blood does not transfer chlamydia, so you would not catch it.
Yes, you can get pregnant and catch chlamydia at the same time.
Children can catch Chlamydia trachomatis (the one that causes a sexually transmitted infection). The most common mode of infection is being born to a woman with chlamydia. It's possible for the child to remain undiagnosed for years after infection. In addition, children can get infected from sexual abuse. There are other types of chlamydia, such as Chlamydia pneumonia, that more commonly infect children.
No, your baby will not catch chlamydia. If you believe you could be infected, and you are pregnant, see your doctor soon.
Chlamydia can only live outside the body for minutes. You can't get it from sharing a sponge.
No, you can not catch chlamydia from someone that is not infected. You can only get chlamydia by having intimate contact with someone who has chlamydia. If you and your partner don't have it, you can't catch it from each other.
There is no such thing as a "chlamydia trait." Chlamydia is not a genetic infection. Once you take effective treatment, the infection is gone, although any damage or scarring it caused is not reversible with antibiotics.