Yes MRSA can be spread via body fluids.
HPV is spread by direct contact and are not spread via body fluids.
The Q fever is contagious. It can be spread to another person via air, saliva, cough, close contact, bodily fluids, blood, etc.
if by transfuse you mean infect the body of the person it is in, yes. you can also spread your cold via blood and other bodily fluids to others, most notedly saliva.
Enteric isloation refers to the avoidence of any contact with bodily fluids of a patient due to pathogens or chemotherapy treatment that can be transmitted via these fluids.
No it cannot live in water. However, MRSA can be spread via surfaces such as a shower wall or handle or a swimming pool hand rail. It is usually spread via contact with a surface that has it on it or by touching a sore of an individual that is contaminated. Jump in the pool, lake etc etc, the water is safe in terms of no MRSA in the water itself. There is also a respiratory version so if someone sneezes on you.......
Yes, it is transmitted via bodily fluids, so it can still be transmitted sexual but also via needles, blood transfusions etc
Yes; MRSA enters the body via a break in the skin.
You are not likely to get MRSA via sexual intercourse.
Infectious diseases can be spread through various modes, including direct contact with infected individuals, airborne transmission via respiratory droplets, and indirect contact with contaminated surfaces or objects. They can also be transmitted through vectors such as mosquitoes and ticks, as well as via food, water, or bodily fluids. Understanding these transmission pathways is crucial for implementing effective prevention and control measures.
MRSA is caught by direct contact (and indirect contact) via a break in the skin.
not if the seman was your seman.....that would mean you already had aids. Aids can only be transfered from an infected person to a non-infected person via bodily fluids like seman or blood....you can't spontaneously create aids via your own fluids.....
No, HIV cannot spread through the air, water, or food. The virus is primarily transmitted through specific bodily fluids, such as blood, semen, vaginal fluids, and breast milk, typically via unprotected sexual contact, sharing needles, or from mother to child during childbirth or breastfeeding. It is not airborne and does not survive long outside the human body, making transmission through environmental sources highly unlikely.