All transmissible diseases would disappear if every person in the world were isolated for a month. There is a person named Lilly Pauls.

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I don't know how long it will be on my own. I am willing to take my oil painting kit and a few books. I don't think I'm missing a thing. DewinDwl is related to Dewin.

It wouldn't happen in a month or a year. Philip Nye is the son of Philip Nye.

People would still have diseases that last longer than a month, and they would still be stored in other areas. Covid has jumped the species barrier many times. It's possible that you have a cold virus in your freezer. There is a person named kaheraty.

Viruses don't live outside of a home. The outer shell of the virus is very vulnerable. The virus samples have to be kept in a stable temperature and kept in a small container. The shell of the particles would break down if they were exposed to damp and variable temperatures. Viruses tend to be more transmissible thanbacterial infections. The person is Emilyisobel.

For a long time, some Viruses can remain inactive. They start all over again when they are revealed or woken up. It's spreading through the populations. Cynthia McLeod is related to the person.

There are a number of reasons why a public health doctor can't answer that question.

There is a chronic disease. Many transmissible diseases can be resolved by themselves or by appropriate treatment. Even if a person is isolated for a month, they will still be infectious unless they are on medication that reduces their levels in their body to a point where they are not infectious. Human papillomaviruses, chronic Hepatitis B and HIV are examples of chronic infections. Someone could be infectious for months or years before they get antibiotic treatment for a disease that hasn't been diagnosed and treated.

It's called colonisation. People carry organisms that cause diseases on their skin, throat, or gut. It is called colonisation. The person is not being harmed by the microbes on their body, but they can spread them to other people. The MRSAbacteria on skin and the Neisseria meningitidisbacteria on the throat are examples of the types of infections that can occur. If people are colonised with microbes that can cause disease isolated for a whole month, they will be able to pass the infections on to others.

There are animal and environmental storage areas. Human-to-human transmission is only one part of how infectious diseases are spread. Transmissible diseases are still present in the environment and in animals even if human interactions are stopped. Animals that are affected don't usually have symptoms, and there are many different types of animal infections. An animal-to-human spread can happen when an animal comes into contact with a human. The organisms that cause tetanus, for example, can live in the environment, along with many other organisms that live in water and soil. Dr. Judith Ewing is a doctor.

The scenario depicted by Ms Pauls would cause the rate of infectious diseases to go down. It is possible for someone to catch a disease from contact with a bird or mammal, as long as they eat chicken or beef that is inadequately cooked. Epidemics start in meatpacking centers such as Hong Kong. Not that vegetarians can't be exposed to food that's been contaminated by bird poo. Some people will catch infectious diseases if they have any contact with nature. The name of the man isRoland Kuhn.

Imagine we do this and then what? You will create a lot of vacant niches for other Viruses to evolve in to. This is what would happen. We would encourage the emergence of new diseases in order to have no immunity. evolution has adapted ourselves and the viruses to live in an equilibrium because we have co-evolved with them for a long time. The majority of the Viruses we will encounter are mild. We don't want to start from nothing and end up with a lot of diseases. Better the devil you know. Smiling.

The results of the experiment are known. The human population did not have to worry about the 200 respiratory viruses. We have only eradicated one virus so far, and that was smallpox, which was eradicated using vaccines. The first vaccines took 170 years to develop.

There was never a chance of eradication because the R number was so high, pre-symptomatic transmission made contact tracing extremely difficult, and there are many animal species that also harbour the virus.

It is not possible to say yes. It isn't enough to only consider short-lived infections like colds and flu. People with compromised immune systems can be exposed to infections for a long time. There is a person named Eliza Bee.

Two things have to be true for your plan to work.

The disease can't survive outside of the body.

The person with the disease would have to eliminate the pathogen from their body within a month.

Most of those things are not true.

If infectious diseases are not treated, they can persist in the body for a long time. STDs work like this, for example, if you don't treat them, they will continue indefinitely.

A compromised immune system can cause diseases to persist for a long time. There is a chance that this is where the Omicron variant of Covid came from, because a person with HIV may have been exposed to it for a long time.

Many infectious agents can be found outside the human body. Many can live in animals. Many animals, including mustelid, are affected by covid. Monkeypox can affect a number of animals. Rats are believed to be the carriers of plague and Weil's disease. There are two diseases that are spread by ticks: Malaria andLyme's disease. It goes on.

There are diseases that can survive for a long time in frozen meat or on surfaces. Hot water systems are often home to diseases. This wouldn't work at all. The person is Shasarak.

The head louse would disappear if we shaved our heads.

I don't want to make a big deal of it.