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Yes, it is considered to be a disease. Anything that is out of balance in the body is considered a disease, or pathological condition.
The onset of fever is the time when the fever begins.
What time it happens.
Influenza is not a foodborne illness.
The population of STOP Foodborne Illness is 5.
Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus Aureus
It is about 3 weeks.
With amphetamine, as with any drug, the onset is the time after which you begin to feel its effects. For amphetamine, the onset time when taken by mouth is about 20 to 60 minutes. The duration is how long you can feel the effects of the drug, in this case about 6 hours, give or take.
the speed of onset for each hazard
The speed of onset for each hazard.
That could be difficult to link a foodborne illness to the onset of chicken pox. It would depend on the type of foodborne illness to relate the onset period of that illness to the exposure and onset of chicken pox. Symptom onset of foodborne illnesses vary a lot. For chicken pox, it is around 2 weeks. According to the CDC, the chicken pox virus is primarily transmitted via the respiratory tract by inhaling aerosols from skin lesions. It can also be transmitted through direct contact. They go on to say that the virus enters the host through the respiratory tract or the conjunctiva. The Web MD site indicates it could be transmitted through the sharing of food or drink. I could not find anything that indicated ingesting the virus as a mode of transmission.