Yes, if the semen on his fingers is still wet and warm. Most STD pathogens die as soon as they dry or cool off.
Chlamydia is a bacterial infection. You can only get chlamydia if you're infected with chlamydia bacteria. Other bacterial infections will not cause or lead to chlamydia, no matter how often you have them.
Chlamydia can be transmitted during vaginal, anal, or oral sex; genital-genital contact; and sharing sex toys. Chlamydia can also be passed from an infected mother to her baby during vaginal childbirth. If none of these is in your definition of "making out," then you can't get chlamydia from making out.
Chlamydia doesn't typically cause constipation, but if someone is infected anally, they may have pain and difficulty emptying their bowels. Someone can get anal chlamydia from anal sex, but it can also affect women who have had vaginal sex, and in whom the bacteria have moved from the vagina to the rectum.
There is little chance of a mother infecting a baby with gonorrhea after birth. For humans already born, gonorrhea can only be transmitted from genital-genital or oral-genital contact.Gonorrhea can still be transmitted via fluids even if a man does not ejaculate. Gonorrhea can also be spread from an untreated mother to her baby during childbirth.
You can't get chlamydia or gonorrhea that way. Chlamydia is caused by bacteria spread by oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
No, trichomoniasis does not pass to the baby of a woman who is infected.
If you are infected with chlamydia, you will be more likely to be infected with HIV, if exposed.
When chlamydia is diagnosed by laboratory testing, rather than a clinical diagnosis, it is not likely to be a mistaken diagnosis. Mistakes occur when health care providers don't think about chlamydia when seeing someone with painful urination. It's not unusual for a patient to be treated for a UTI without testing, get only partial relief, and then later find out she has chlamydia, gonorrhea, or trichomoniasis.
While swallowing chlamydia-infected semen can infect your throat with chlamydia, it will not affect a pregnancy.
Yes, trichomoniaisis is communicable. You can get it from sex with an infected partner. It's also possible that you can get it from sharing a wet washcloth with someone who is infected.
No, you can't get trichomoniasis from poor hygiene. YOu get it from an infected person.
Chlamydia can be spread from the time you are infected. You can have it for years without knowing.