tuberculosis
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.
The viral water-borne diseases cannot be treated by the antibiotics while the bacterial water-borne diseases can be treated by the antibiotics.
Acne is thought to be caused by a bacterial infection when the pores in the skin become blocked and the naturally occurring oils cannot be released. The resulting buildup then becomes infected and shows as a zit or blackhead which can become a very serious bacterial infection.
No. Cancers are not communicable diseases- they are specific to the patient. You cannot 'catch' cancer by contact with an infected person.
Infectious diseases are diseases that others can get from you either by touching the infected area, breathing the infected air, or touching items that you or the infected area have touched. Noninfectious diseases mean others cannot get the disease from you in any manner.
It cannot spread like a virus and yellow fever is transmitted by the bite of the female mosquitoes of the species Aedes aegypti.
no they can not
For tuberculosis: it is transmitted by droplets, i.e. coughing or sneezing. For pneumonia: viral pneumonia, again, droplets. Bacterial pneumonia, normal body bacteria from the skin and mucous membranes, travel to the lungs and cause infection in the presence of fluid in the lungs, like there would be if you were congested. In all instances, having a suppressed immune system can increase the chances of getting the disease/illness.
No you will acquire it from sharing a towel. AIDS is an STD or sexually transmitted disease so you can only acquire it upon sexual intercourse. Even sharing spoon or kissing the person cannot transmit the virus to you. You can also acquire the disease upon blood transfusion if you received a blood from an infected person or even if the needle used to you was used by an infected person.
I am guessing these questions are not general questions and refer more to perhaps an assignment. It is far easier to research "scarlet fever" on a search engine than post many questions about the disease. For instance, a simply Google search returns a pleutra of information regarding scarlet fever. http://www.dermnetnz.org/bacterial/scarlet-fever.html
Viruses ALL ignore antibiotics, Bacterial infections vary in their response depending on the sensitivity of the bacteria to the specific antibiotic.
Yes, once a child has had chicken pox, he or she cannot cannot usually get the disease again and so could hang out with a child who has the disease. However, he or she should touch the open, oozing sores on the infected child, nor share anything that would transfer saliva. If the infected child is sneezing, that child should be kept at home until they are not sneezing.