A question that concerns HIV?
Question:
Answers:
yes you can get infected with unprotected sex :O
If there is unprotected sex - yes.
I'll bet that mosquitoes can carry A.I.D.S., The CDC says no but that is a lie.
Neglecting all other means -- yes.
If you have any contact with an infected person's bodily fluids including semen and blood, you can be infected.
Yes, you are on the right track. Unprotected sex = risk.
You cannot catch a disease from someone who does not have a disease.
You can't get the flu from someone who doesn't have the flu.
You can't get HIV from someone who doesn't have HIV.
You can't get gonorrhea from someone who doesn't have gonorrhea.
And so on...
ok, to answer this question and some others, mosquitos r disease carriers for some reason, there not carring hiv, if they were everyone in the world would have it,not just 42 million. hundred of millions, so if ur worried abou thtat one, garlic and the mesquitos will leave u alone, now to answer his question, hiv u can get the virus from sharing needles wiht a infected partner, and stay away from monkeys
A person gets HIV when an infected person's body fluids (blood, semen, fluids from the vagina or breast milk) enter his or her bloodstream. The virus can enter the blood through linings in the mouth, anus or sex organs (the penis and vagina), or through broken skin.
Both men and women can spread HIV. A person with HIV can feel okay and still give the virus to others. Pregnant women with HIV also can give the virus to their babies.
Common ways people get HIV:
* Sharing a needle to take drugs
* Having unprotected sex with an infected person
You cannot get HIV from:
* Touching or hugging someone who has HIV/AIDS
* Public bathrooms or swimming pools
* Sharing cups, utensils, or telephones with someone who has HIV/AIDS
* Bug bites
Who Can Get HIV?
Anyone can get HIV if they engage in certain activities. You may have a higher risk of getting HIV if you:
* Have unprotected sex. This means vaginal or anal intercourse without a condom or oral sex without a latex barrier with a person infected with HIV.
* Share needles to inject drugs or steroids with an infected person. The disease can also be transmitted by dirty needles used to make a tattoo or in body piercing.
* Receive a blood transfusion from an infected person. This is very unlikely in the U.S. and Western Europe, where all blood is tested for HIV infection.
* Are born to a mother with HIV infection. A baby can also get HIV from the breast milk of an infected woman.
If you fall into any of the categories above, you should consider being tested.
Health care workers are at risk on the job and should take special precautions. Some health care workers have become infected after being stuck with needles containing HIV-infected blood or less frequently, after infected blood contact with an open cut or through splashes into the worker's eyes or inside their nose.
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