TB
Infectious diseases from animal bites include cat-scratch disease, tetanus and rabies
Mono is an infectious disease that can be spread through bodily fluids. This disease can go into remission and come back.
No, a cat does not "naturally" have rabies; it is a disease that is transmitted from other infected animals, almost always through a bite. However, being bitten by a rabid animal does not necessarily mean that the bitten animal will become infected. Humans, cats, and dogs are only mildly susceptible to the disease.
Nutritional diseases are not classified as infectious disease because they do not fit the definition of 'infectious'. They cannot be transmitted from one person to another and the causative agents come from the environment.
After playing with a animal wash your hands with a handwash. If in a epidemic, bath after you come back from outside.
A snare works like this: An animal will come along and put its foot inside the snare. as the animal pulls away the spikes will catch and bite into its skin and the animal is trapped.
Sharks have frenzies. When a shark attacks an animal, more sharks come and try to get the animal that was attacked. Some sharks even bite eachother.
The animal's saliva will need to come into contact with your blood. This usually happens with biting. However, I believe you can also get rabies if scratched by an infected animal.
Typhoid fever attacks other organisms by giving you a severe headache or they can come through a digestive system and cause an infectious feverish disease.
The standard definitions is "(of a disease or disease-causing organism) likely to be transmitted to people, organisms, etc., through the environment."It has come to mean " likely to spread or influence others in a rapid manner."
It was a disease passed on by contact with people who were infected & fleas, EVERYONE could get it.
In both environments there is a lot more opportunity for an infected person to come into contact or near an uninfected person and transmit the disease.