How the tapeworms get inside the human body?
How humans get tapeworms largely has to do with the quality of foods you eat. Tapeworms are known to live in beef and pork. If you are served an undercooked portion of these meats, the tapeworm could still be surviving and make its way through your digestive system and into your intestinal walls. A tapeworm can also indirectly enter your body from reproduction. Some tapeworm species deposit dozens of larvae into the animal’s muscle tissues. Again, if you are served undercooked meats, those larvae can hatch once they enter your body. Freshwater fish are another way people can get tapeworms. If raw sewage is pumped into freshwater, it can be transporting tapeworms from animal feces. That feces is consumed by crustaceans, which are then eaten by the fish. If you eat raw fish with these tapeworms, you can play host to a fish tapeworm that will rob you of B12 vitamins. Preventing tapeworms can be done by not consuming raw foods. The chances of getting a tapeworm through raw food consumption