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Some germs will die within minutes of leaving a viable host. Other germs take days to die once leaving a viable host.
Germs can stay alive in air for up to 48 hours after leaving an infected person or animal. Some germs can live up to a week on surfaces they infect. It is best to keep hands washed, and surfaces sterile to kill germs.
No, not all the germs come off because there are billions and billions and even trillions of types of germs that can exist on a single doorknob, and if soap is applied, about only 99% of the germs go away because soap is not a killer of all the trillions of germs there are. There are some that are not affected by soap, and if soap is used to often, the germs get used to the soap and build up an immunity to it, therefore when you use soap to often, soap will eventually not affect the germs at all.
Nothing. Germs have to be bad germs and have to get into you to harm you.
Its possible it kills all of the germs, probably it did in many trials however in some cases it cannot in which it must be labeled 99 percent.
Yes, some germs help digest food.
yes and no. some germs could be bad to your health, for example, germs are the reason you get sick. but that is only a type of germ. there are germs every where! and not ALL of them are bad, some are bad, but not all. therefore, u should be careful with wat you tuch, but dont worry too much because not all germs are bad
yes every part of your body has germs but some germs are good.
Yes, elbows do have germs some of the time, but not all of the time.
Common names for germs include bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. Examples of specific germs include E. coli (bacteria), influenza (virus), Candida (fungus), and Plasmodium (parasite causing malaria).
The germs on your hands will spread to every surface you touch. So the door handle in the bathroom will be full of germs. Any one who touches it after that will take some of the germs with them. everything they touch will also leave some germs behind. Also if you touch someone else you will pass germs to them as well.
Some white cells call macrophages will eat germs. Some others will tag germs with a marker that tells the other cells that they need to get rid of them.
Yes you can. Some germs can survive in the microscopic water droplets that are propelled out of the nose or mouth when we breathe, therefore spreading the germs. How long the germs live is dependant on what the virus is, however.
no germs do not always make us sick some are good!
Some do and some don't
Some "germs" or bacteria and viruses cause disease and sickness in general. However, some bacteria are neutral or helpful to the human body.
mostly you are breathin is oxygen with some germs, to let u no that all germs are not bad for your body