Chlamydia (Chlamydia trachomatis) is most commonly spread via sexual contact, so it will most likely not be spread via household washing, although that is quite vague. If by household washing you mean washing clothing of the infected individual with clothing of uninfected persons, than most likely not. The amount of bacteria required to cause infection would probably not make it onto clothing articles and, with proper washing, the detergent and subsequent drying would kill/immobilize any bacteria present. If you mean washing a surface with chlamydia bacteria on it and then washing another surface, again, most likely not - if you are using a cleaning product, it will most likely kill that bacteria. The only 2 ways this bacteria would be spread throughout a household is either through birth (a newborn baby can be exposed to it in the birth canal and develop an eye infection or pneumonia) or it is illegal, so your worries should are few!
No you can not.
There are some home tests available, and there are services that allow you to go directly to a lab for chlamydia testing for a significant fee. There is no test for chlamydia that you can do with common household items.
When determining the ideal washing machine size for your household, consider the amount of laundry you typically do, the available space for the machine, the frequency of washing, and the types of items you wash.
Chlamydia can't live for more than a few minutes outside your body. Washing your clothes regularly is a good health practice, but you can't reinfect yourself with chlamydia by wearing unwashed clothes that you wore before treatment.
You won't reinfect yourself with chlamydia from the vaginal insert used to treat yeast. Chlamydia can live for only a short time outside the body, and washing and rinsing the insert is more than enough.
Household chores, washing car.
Vacuuming, dish washing, and dusting
The washing machine
washing soda(sodium carbonate).....
The 'Disposal' was the first electric food waste disposer for household use was introduced in 1935. The Electric 32 volt washing machine, in 1935, was manufactured by Syracuse Washing Machine Corporation.
Children can catch Chlamydia trachomatis (the one that causes a sexually transmitted infection). The most common mode of infection is being born to a woman with chlamydia. It's possible for the child to remain undiagnosed for years after infection. In addition, children can get infected from sexual abuse. There are other types of chlamydia, such as Chlamydia pneumonia, that more commonly infect children.
Chlamydia has the same mode of transmission for circumcised and uncircumcised men. There is no difference. You can get it from oral, anal or vaginal sex; from genital-genital contact; and from being born to a woman with chlamydia.