yes
Being a Hepatitis C carrier means that at some point, the person was infected with the virus and it stays in their body for life.
A carrier of chickenpox, like a carrier of any infectious disease, is someone who is infected and can transmit the germ but does not yet have symptoms. A chickenpox carrier is someone who's spreading the virus but does not yet have symptoms.
It is important to know that there is no cure for AIDS (or the HIV virus). But the is treatment for the virus that can help prolong the life of a carrier
They contain it by not using protection in a untested people sex. If your all tested and both not with the virus then you do not have to use a condom.
Carrier
When people speak of a "carrier" of an infectious disease, they normally are referring to someone who is carrying the germ, can infect others, but has no symptoms. The period between getting the virus and getting symptoms is called the "incubation period" of an infection. The incubation period of chickenpox is 10-21 days, but is typically about two weeks. However, chickenpox is a virus in the herpes family that goes into remission after the patient recovers from chickenpox. The virus stays in your body. It is the same virus that causes shingles in some in later years. However, in this period of remission, the patient is not contagious and isn't, technically, a "carrier."
The answer is no: if you have had chickenpox yourself when young, you will have been carrying the varicella-zoster virus responsible for it ever since. This remains dormant, usually forever – unless you come into contact with someone with shingles, which can then re-activate the virus.
Yes, it is possible to be a carrier of the mumps virus even after having had the infection, although this is rare. After recovering from mumps, most individuals develop immunity and are unlikely to get reinfected or spread the virus. However, in some cases, particularly in individuals with weakened immune systems, the virus can persist in certain tissues and potentially be transmitted. Vaccination is the best way to prevent mumps and its spread.
No; if you have the infection, you are affected by the HIV virus.
Yes, once you have had German measles (rubella), you typically develop immunity to the virus and are not considered a carrier. This means you cannot spread the virus to others. However, in very rare cases, some individuals may experience a reactivation of the virus, but this is uncommon. Generally, those who have been vaccinated or infected are protected from future infections.
The difference between HIV and AIDS is that HIV is the virus that causes the disease AIDS. You can be a carrier of the HIV virus and not contract the disease but you can infect others.