Touching contaminated surfaces, kissing, contact with bodily fluids, direct skin to skin, microorganisms from faeces, infected plant material left in field
Pathogens can be carried in the air and then breathed in (a common example is the droplet infection, which is when sneezing, coughing or talking expels pathogens in droplets which can be breathed in)
Injecting a small amount of a harmless pathogen into an individual's body, they can become immune to it so it will not infect them. This means they cannot pass it on.
Symptoms: Initially flu-like symptoms, then the virus attacks the immune system and leads to AIDS - acquire immune deficiency syndrome (a state in which the body is susceptible to many different diseases)
How it is spread: By sexual contact or exchange of bodily fluids such as blood
How it is being prevented: Using condoms, not sharing needles, screening blood when it is used in transfusions, mothers with HIV bottle-feeding their children instead of breastfeeding, use of antiretroviral drugs (stop the virus replicating in the body)
Symptoms: Fever, stomach cramps, vomiting, diarrhoea (all caused by the toxins they secrete)
How it is spread: These bacteria can be found in raw meat and eggs, unhygienic conditions
How it is being prevented: Poultry are vaccinated against Salmonella, keeping raw meat away from cooked food, avoid washing it, wash hands and surfaces when handling it, cook food thoroughly
Symptoms: Thick yellow or green discharge from the vagina or penis, pain when urinating
How it is spread: It is a sexually transmitted disease spread through unprotected sexual contact
How it is being prevented: By using contraception such as condoms and antibiotics (used to be treated with penicillin but many resistant strains are developing)
Symptoms: Fevers and shaking (when the protists burst out of blood cells)
How it is spread: The vector is the female Anopheles mosquito, in which the protists reproduce sexually. When the mosquito punctures the skin to feed on blood, the protists enter the human bloodstream via their saliva.
How it is being prevented: Using insecticide coated insect nets while sleeping, removing stagnant water to prevent the vectors from breeding, travellers taking antimalarial drugs to kill parasites that enter the blood
Each pathogen has an antigen on their surface, which is a structure which a specific complementary antibody can bind to. Once antibodies begin to bind to the pathogen, the pathogens start to clump together, resulting in it being easier for white blood cells to find them.
If you become infected again with the same pathogen, the specific complementary antibodies will be produced at a faster rate. The individual will not feel the symptoms of the illness. They are said to be immune.