If you are allergic, then yes. But if its normal food then no....unless your eating poison ivy then u mite have a itching problem
Chickenpox is a virus. It can't make its own food.
There is no known cure for chickenpox. A vaccine was invented in 1974 to prevent chickenpox, and medications were invented in the late 20th century to treat chickenpox and other viruses in the herpesvirus family. However, chickenpox is a virus that remains in your body for life and can cause shingles later. There is no viral "cure" that eliminates the virus, although your immune system clears chickenpox disease within one or two weeks.
Chickenpox is caused by the varicella-zoster virus, and it can spread easily. You can get chickenpox from an infected person who sneezes, coughs, or shares food with you. It is also spread if you touch the fluid from a chickenpox blister. A person who has chickenpox can spread the virus even before he or she has any symptoms. Chickenpox is most easily spread from 2 to 3 days before the rash appears until all the blisters have crusted over.
You can but someone who eats the food could get the chicken pox from that person who had the chicken pox that touched the food.
There is no chickenpox RNA; chickenpox is a DNA virus.
A person with a history of chickenpox or history of chickenpox vaccine will typically have a positive antibody test for chickenpox.
Chickenpox vaccine is useful. It reduces the risk of chickenpox, of complications, hospitalizations, and deaths from chickenpox, and of shingles.
Chickenpox is not an autoimmune disease. Chickenpox is a viral communicable disease.
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Powdered oatmeal in a bath can help with itching from chickenpox. You can buy specially prepared bath oatmeal in the store, or can use a blender or food processor to pulverize the regular oats from your kitchen.
Yes, you can give chickenpox vaccine in the same area as other vaccines.
Yes, anybody can get chickenpox.