Yes, there are many different strains of H1N1 influenza and you can get a different strain than you had before. Unless you had lab testing to confirm the specific strain of H1N1 and know exactly what strain is circulating in your community, you would be wise to get a vaccination even if you were diagnosed with H1N1 in the past. The flu vaccine for the 2012-2013 flu season includes the vaccine for H1N1/09 again.
Not usually unless the virus mutates in a significant way from the strain that first infected you.
yes, all diseases are the same. You can recatch any disease, hope this answers your question, if you have more questions just message me, happy wiki answering or questioning =]
no
Yes. Once you have caught swine flu you cannot catch it again.
No, the Swine Flu is not hereditary. It is a virus. It is caught in the same manner as the "regular flu" that goes around every year.
If you catch swine flu once, if you catch it again then it won't be as serious.
yes and no because if you had the swine flu once and you get vaccinated you propelywont get it again.
Yes.
In the US in the 2012-2013 flu season, the H1N1/09 swine flu vaccine is included once again in the "regular" trivalent and quadravalent vaccines that have been prepared for the seasonal flu. No separate vaccination is needed.
Actually, Yes he did have swine flu but he's back on his feet again.
no probly not
No, swine flu is a virus and must be caught from someone or something which is carrying it. It does not just spontaneously materialise in a body.
The breeds of the Swine Flu were pigs. They carried diseases which were unknown until humans caught it.
One is H1N1, or swine flu.
The people who originally caught the type of swine flu that pigs get, caught it the same way as the regular seasonal flu is caught among people, through contact with the virus that caused the flu in the sick pigs in their respiratory droplets from the pig's sneezes and coughs. That is the mechanism of infection of all types of influenza viruses. If you are asking more how the swine flu virus from pigs became able to infect humans, see the related questions area below for the answer to what caused the 2009 pandemic flu.