A few diseases that a human could get from contaminated waters viral hepatitis, cholera, typhoid fever and a range of stomach and intestinal diseases. and a disease called the flesh eating disease.
it will kill you or you will get sickIf it is contaminated with sewage it can give you diarrohea at best and cholera at worst.If it is contaminated with chemicals it is unknown what it will do to you.we will get many diseases
Medical waste can transmit a variety of diseases, from HIV and hepatitis to MRSA and E. coli. Basically, any medical waste that is contaminated with a human pathogen can then transmit that pathogen on to another human.
Yes it is surely.If the air is contaminated you are prone to air borne diseases like asthma and other respiratory diseases to site an example.
Typhoid,and Cholera are spread by water borne bacteria caused by humans drinking contaminated water.
they can cure human diseases but the question is should we use them.
Examples of human diseases caused by protozoa: malaria, amoebias , giardiasis , toxoplasmosis , cryptosporidiosis, trichomoniasis , leishmaniasis , sleeping sickness , dysentery,
Diseases caused by exposure to human feces include gastrointestinal infections such as E. coli, salmonella, and norovirus. Additionally, diseases like hepatitis A and parasitic infections like giardiasis and cryptosporidiosis can also be transmitted through contact with feces. Proper hygiene practices and sanitation facilities are crucial in preventing the spread of these diseases.
Yes,they generally come from from sewerage and are called 'fecal coliforms' since they are found in human and animal waste. Drinking contaminated water causes the bacterial diseases of Typhoid and Cholera.
Sarcodines are a group of protozoa that include amoebas. Some species of amoebas can cause human diseases such as amoebic dysentery and brain infections like primary amoebic meningoencephalitis. These diseases can be transmitted through contaminated water or poor hygiene.
Yes, people can die from consuming contaminated water or food grown in contaminated soil. Poor water quality can lead to waterborne diseases and soil contamination can affect the safety and quality of crops, which can in turn impact human health. Access to clean water and maintaining healthy soil are essential for preventing health risks associated with contaminated water and soil.
Diseases in the 1970s were carried and transmitted in the same ways they are today (bacteria, bacteria and parasites only have so many ways to enter the body). These include through these primary methods:intake of air (example TB, tuberculosis) - breathing, coughing, sneezingfrom touching objects that have a live virus or live bacteriafrom human to human touch, most often a handshake (eg from the hands)from animal wastedrinking contaminated watereating contaminated foodsexual transmissioncontamination of a wound even in surgery
The simple answer is this: The vast majority of the people voting to keep it illegal do not suffer from the diseases that it could cure or help treat.