Someone with chickenpox should stay home from work until all lesions are scabbed. In the US, your employer's policy about leave is individual to the company.
If you have the chickenpox, you should stay home until you are no longer contagious; that is, until all blisters and sores have scabbed.
After having chickenpox, the varicella zoster virus retreats to your spinal cord nerves, not your blood, where it remains for live.
Yes. It does help. By enlarge chickenpox does not leave any scars on face or rest of the body. But it is always good job to take help from your family physician.
A chickenpox "carrier" is someone who is infected with chickenpox but does not have symptoms. Anyone susceptible to chickenpox can be a chickenpox carrier. If you are a carrier, typically you will develop blisters as the illness progresses.
Yes, chickenpox can often leave scars, especially if the blisters are scratched or picked at. The severity of scarring can vary depending on the individual and how the chickenpox lesions were managed during the healing process. It's important to avoid scratching chickenpox blisters to reduce the risk of scarring.
Unless declared incapacitated by your doctor, sure. You can work for your employer or on a second job. But if you have been granted FMLA, you are prohibited from working because you ARE incapacitated from working.
Yes, they can. I suggest you don't do it, though. It'll leave a mark. Forever.
gug
In the US, you may be eligible for unpaid Family and Medical Leave Act time off to care for a child with chickenpox. Ask your human resources department if FMLA applies to your employer.
You not allow patient leave with catheter in bladder.
'Study leave' is the period of leave granted to a student prior to his examinations, for the purpose of preparing for the examination(s).
A by-your-leave is a request for individual permission to carry out an activity, usually granted by an individual for an individual.