No unless you want your turbine to be neutron activated. (You don't.)

You would pump water through the reactor and use a heat exchanger to a secondary water loop which powers the turbine. Maybe you can do without the secondary loop altogether, not sure; this ITER document suggests only one loop, but it's super vague: https://www.iter.org/sci/MakingitWork

No one has figured out how to actually do this yet. Which is why it is vague. The radiation levels and difficulty maintaining the magnetic confinement make this essentially impossible right now.

Another reason why fusion is always 50 years away. It’s really hard (outside of a nuclear bomb or star, anyway).