If you toched someone with it you would catch it. ALso many people tried to run away which just caused it to spread more. the disease came from rats and people's toilets so it is all over the streets. The dead bodies could still spread the disease too.
1. Eat
2.Drink
3.contaminated objects
4. air
bacterium can live on skin and if that gets in the body it can do a lot of damage
The typical ways are airborne, blood borne, vector borne, direct contact and indirect contact.
White blood cells protects us (humans) by preventing pathogens from entering the body.
the virus is transmitted to humans by mosquitos
the bite of a mosquito
Toxoplasmosis
The disease is transmitted from animals to humans.Plague infects wild rodents, especially rats, and is transmitted animal to animal and occasionally to humans by flea bites. The flea is the vector.
Soil, food and water are considered non living reservoirs. They hold potential pathogens that can be transmitted to humans and animals.
No TB is not genetically transmitted. TB is transmitted through airborne pathogens that are breathed in to the lungs.
Many pathogens can and are transmitted by mites and ticks. Some well known examples are Tularemia, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, and Lyme disease, but there are hundreds, if not thousands of others. Mites are more famous for carrying pathogens that attack plants but there are some, such as scabies, that affect humans and animals. Some examples of the mite-borne plant pathogens are wheat mosaic, rye mosaic, Cherry mottle leaf, and Oat necrotic mottle.
yes. Pathogens are diseases
Any blood-borne or saliva-borne pathogens can be transmitted to the unwary.
bloodborne pathogens can be transmitted inthe air
By the pathogen man.
Mucus, Urine, Semen, and Cerebrospinal fluid.
The respiratory system; the lungs.
Any pathogen causes disease. Which disease depends on which pathogen.
Bleach will kill most blood borne pathogens.
Epilepsy is not an infectious disease or virus, so it does not get transmitted at all.