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Intentional contagion of infection

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Intentional contagion of infection, also called voluntary contagion, conscious contagion, or intentional transmission[1] is the act by which a human being deliberately infects another with a pathogen knowing that they will be infected. In some legislations of some countries this act has been criminalized, managing to prosecute it and consider it as aggravating for fraud or recklessness.

One of the most frequent cases of intentional contagion is that of viruses and bacteria that are considered sexually transmitted infections, being commonly the most common methods through the malicious use of syringes and the unsafe sexual act, such as the criminal transmission of HIV.

Prevention measures for different transmissible diseases

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COVID-19

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In 2020, during the national quarantine in Italy due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Italian authorities put in place a series of strict measures to prevent the increase in cases of those infected, eventually being able to judicially punish those who disobey these indications.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Daryll Rowe's sentence could change the law's approach to HIV transmission". The Conversation. 19 April 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  2. ^ Wallace, Danielle (12 March 2020). "Italy threatens fines, jail time for those not obeying coronavirus lockdown as death toll reaches 1,000+". Fox News. Retrieved 13 March 2020.