If the child has measels, and you were not vaccinated, then yes you can.
My grandmother had measles when she was a baby. I would never want to catch measles.
airborne
The prognosis for an otherwise healthy, well-nourished child who contracts measles is usually quite good.
simple answer no
MMR is measles mumps and rubella. If you give a strain of measles to a child, it's immune system develops anti bodies that destroy the virus, the anti bodies will stay around for ever and the child will be immune to measles as the anti bodies will prevent the measles virus from spreading.
The doctor injects the child with the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine, which contains weakened or inactivated forms of the measles virus. This stimulates the child's immune system to recognize and fight the virus, providing immunity against measles without causing the disease. The vaccine helps the body produce antibodies, ensuring protection if the child is later exposed to the actual virus.
Measles is a viral infection. Antibiotics treat infections caused by bacteria. Bacteria and viruses are two very different types of germs, and antibiotics will do nothing to cure the measles.
It is a contagious disease- you can catch it.
It is possible but rare to get measles after being vaccinated as a child. The measles vaccine is highly effective, but no vaccine is 100% perfect. In some cases, the immunity provided by the vaccine may wane over time or the vaccine may not have conferred full immunity.
Measles is caused by paramyxo virus and although may have infected humans once to give rise to antigens as immunization can again infect humans.
Antibiotics can only work against bacterium, whereas measles are caused by a virus.
No, measles is a highly contagious viral infection that spreads through respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs or sneezes. It is not transmitted through food or water.