If he sticks to the treatment regimen there's a high probability YES. He's also cured.
If you tested negative, you will not pass it on. If he has it, he caught it from another partner.
Typical treatment in pregnancy is one gram of azithromycin -- the same treatment for non-pregnant people with chlamydia. In many states, the partner can be treated without an exam, but laws vary from state to state. Ask your OBGYN about the possibility in your area.
You can get chlamydia again if you were reinfected after treatment. You must abstain until seven days after both partners start treatment.
Chlamydia can be treated in a woman.
If you had chlamydia for three years, you should ensure now that you and your partner have been treated. There is no further followup needed, other than retesting two to three months after to ensure you weren't reinfected.
Chlamydia isn't treated with a shot. It's treated with oral medication (pills). Gonorrhea is treated with an antibiotic injection.
Assuming he received the correct treatment, odds are HIGH he is cured. But, how can he not know he had it and not know he had treatment?
Just get tested and treated, and if you have any further procedures, abstain from intercourse according to the directions given by your health care provider. There are no special chlamydia risks with an open wound, but there are other risks -- if your partner has chlamydia, the parnter has put him/herself at risk for bloodborne pathogens like HIV and hepatitis as well.
Chlamydia trachomatis improves rapidly with erythromycin. Chlamydia psittaci infection is treated with tetracycline, bed rest, oxygen supplementation, and codeine-containing cough preparations. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is treated with erythromycin
yes it can be.
As long as you don't transfer fluids from your finger to your eyes or genitals, you won't get chlamydia from fingering someone. However, you only need to abstain for seven days. For the sake of your health and that of your partner, find something else to do for this brief period of time.
Babies get chlamydia during vaginal birth to an infected mother. They don't get infected before birth. An infected baby must be treated.
You would lower your risk of complication from untreated chlamydia.