You can't get gonorrhea from a hand job. You get gonorrhea from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected mother.
Of course. Gonorrhea can be contracted through virtually any genital contact regardless of the sex of the parties involved.
Gonorrhea is transmmited by sexual contact with another person already infected with the STD.
Gonorrhea is caused by a bacteria spread through sexual contact, typically intercourse. It is an STD. Some form of sexual contact, skin to skin, is required to spread the infection. It is not spread by air/respiratory, touching an object, etc. One person has to be infected, even if they do not yet know they are infected. However, gonorrhea creates a very specific discharge. If you have a discharge, you should NOT have sex until you are tested AND treated for any STD.
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.
Direct hand to hand contact or other direct touch with a person who has it or contact with items or surfaces they have touched.
Hand and foot comes from direct contact with another infected person.
Gonorrhea and HIV have the same risk factors. Patients with HIV should be tested annually for gonorrhea. All patients with gonorrhea should be tested for HIV.
The bacteria commonly transmitted by direct hand contact and producing a nosocomial infection is Staphylococcus aureus.
Yes it is
Gonorrhea is typically a reproductive tract infection, locating in the penis in the male and the vagina in the female. However, it is possible for gonorrhea to transit to the urinary tract in both genders due to the proximity of the urethra to the reproductive tract.
Gonorrhea
The ulna doesn't ve any contact with any bone from the hand