Can you share a drink with someone?
In short, yes. Your risk of catching herpes from a drink, eating utensils or a toothbrush is extremely low. It’s far more likely for you to catch the virus through kissing or sex. However, for hygiene reasons, it’s still best to avoid sharing drinks, eating utensils and any other items that directly touch your lips.
What disease can you get from sharing a water bottle?
The meningococcal bacteria can be spread by direct contact with the saliva of an infected person, through kissing or the sharing of food, drinks, water bottles, cigarettes or mouthpieces of musical instruments.

Can you catch hepatitis from drinking after someone?
Hepatitis B isn’t spread through saliva (spit), so you CAN’T get hepatitis B from sharing food or drinks or using the same fork or spoon. Hepatitis B is also not spread through kissing, hugging, holding hands, coughing, sneezing, or breastfeeding.
Can someone’s saliva make you sick?
Kissing can transmit many germs, including those that cause cold sores, glandular fever and tooth decay. Saliva can transmit various diseases, which means that kissing is a small but significant health risk.
Can u catch Hep C through saliva?
You can contract hepatitis C by coming into direct contact with an infected person’s blood. It can also be transmitted by contact with bodily fluids including saliva or semen of an infected person, but this is rare.

Can you catch diseases or other sicknesses from sharing drinks?
Can you catch diseases or other sicknesses from sharing drinks? The answer is a resounding “yes” — some diseases/sicknesses, anyway. Since there’s almost certain to be saliva involved in any sharing of drinks, salivary transfer of germs/viruses/etc. is going to happen.
What happens if you share a drink with someone else?
Saliva naturally slips into a drink even when you only take one sip. Some viruses, bacteria, and other germs live in saliva. Therefore, it’s possible to catch multifarious diseases and illnesses from sharing drinks.
What happens if you share a water bottle with someone?
Bottles of water are frequently shared between. Sharing drinks is so common you may not realize that you can catch diseases and other illnesses from it. Saliva naturally slips into a drink even when you only take one sip. Some viruses, bacteria, and other germs live in saliva.
Can you catch a cold from sharing a drink?
Typically, you’ll experience symptoms 1-3 days after catching it. The most common virus that triggers a cold is the rhinovirus and it is highly contagious. Aside from being spread through the air, it is also caught through sharing utensils and drinks.