no
Yes, a parent of a child with chickenpox can pass on the virus to others through direct contact or respiratory droplets. It is highly contagious.
chickenpox
Shingles is pretty rare in kids and teens who have healthy immune systems. Shingles is caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox.It's easy to pass the virus on to people who aren't immune to chickenpox (like people who haven't already had chickenpox or gotten the chickenpox vaccine). The difference is that if they get infected, they won't get shingles.
A person with shingles can pass the virus to anyone who hasn't had chickenpox before. A person who has not had chickenpox can become infected through direct contact with a person who is infected with shingles. After becoming infected, the person will develop chickenpox, but not shingles. The infection can be very serious for people who have a compromised immune system. However, a person with a normal immune system who has already had chickenpox cannot be infected with shingles. If a person has not previously had the chickenpox, it is best to avoid contact with any person who is infected with shingles until the infection has cleared the person completely.
no
A chickenpox "carrier" is someone who is infected with chickenpox but does not have symptoms. Anyone susceptible to chickenpox can be a chickenpox carrier.
Fungi
well, my sister and me first started spying in stores. we would spy on our parent, and little sister. then we started making spy stuff. ( like top secret files, fake pass ports etc..) thats all I have to say. you do the rest.
NO it is imposible to spread the virus like that
Cold sores are caused by the herpes virus. With 80% of us infected, it is common to pass the virus.
Backstage Pass - 2005 Kid Sister was released on: USA: 7 February 2008
Any person suffering from a virus such as chicken pox should be isolated. If you are caring for a person with chicken pox you will not pass on the virus to another person who has already suffered a form of the disease; they will be immune. When visiting or caring for a person with any illness, especially an infectious disease, good hygiene is essential. The most important aspect of good hygiene is hand-washing; you should wash your hands thoroughly, in hot water if possible, and dry them well before and after contact with the ill person. This is hugely important because if you are caring for or visiting an ill person, you could not only carry their infection to others, but could easily transmit an infection to them, picked up from hand contact or by contact with objects such as telephones, door handles, light switches, elevator buttons, and so on. A person who is already ill is at greater risk of contracting an infection. Very many infections are transmitted by contact with someone either suffering from the infection or someone who has had contact with an infected person and failed to observe proper hygiene procedures. If you touched someone with chickenpox the day before, you are not likely to carry chickenpox to another child unless you yourself are infected. If you don't have immunity and got infected as a result of your contact, you could infect others.