Flies can transmit diseases because they are in constant contact with decomposing materials, such as feces or dirt, carriers of bacteria capable of causing certain diseases, such as ringworm, outbreak, vermin, trachoma and dysentery, for example.
These diseases can be transmitted by house flies, as the bacteria generally adhere to their fur and can be released on food or inside skin sores when they come in direct contact with humans.
- In addition.
- Flies can ingest bacteria that remain alive for a few days inside the animal.
- Depositing in human food when the fly uses saliva to feed.
But another disease caused by flies is human myasis, which can be of the amol or doicheira type, which occurs after depositing eggs that become larvae, which feed on tissues, a wound, for example.
Simple precautions to avoid domestic flies and, therefore, the diseases they transmit are:
However, if flies can grow indoors even following these tips, there are ways to eliminate them, such as using insecticides, traps, or vaporizers.