TB FLU COLDS MEASLES etc
airborne transmission.
by relation
Airborne precautions are required to protect against airborne transmission of infectious agents.Diseases requiring airborne precautions include, but are not limited to: Measles, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), Varicella (chickenpox), and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.Preventing airborne transmission requires personal respiratory protection and special ventilation and air handling.
No, AIDS is not communicable through airborne transmission.
airborne
You can get an infectious disease through airborne transmission, bloodborne transmission, sexual transmission, or oral/fecal route, to name a few. Tuberculosis is airborne, HIV is bloodborne or sexual, polio is oral/fecal.
The Airborne Rangers, an example is 101st airborne.
airborne, droplet, and contact
the transmission of pathogens - bacteria, viruses, spores- in the atmosphere from person to persons for example coughing and sneezing expels the dust, pathogens etc out of the airways into the atmosphere where they can easily be inhaled by anyone or settle on inate objects to be transferred at a later date.
Airborne or droplet transmission are commonly used to describe infections that are spread through inhalation.
By inhaling pathogens from a sick person's sneeze or cough
Infectious and contagious are considered different by the transmission route. A condition that is infectious is transmitted by contact with body fluids by touch or by airborne route. One such example is influenza, or the common flu.