Do one get AIDS by kissing (deeply) and AIDS patient?


Question:


Answers:
NO, Please follow the links to educate yourself it is very important and will save you from a loot of myths and ignorance out there. My brother in law died from HIV from a blood transfusion in the early 80's so I think its terrible the myths people believe and how People with HIV get treated.

Other Answers:
i dun think kissing spreads AIDS...nope
nooooo aids is an std
only if you have open cuts or sores in your mouth,lips,or tongue.
no unless it is french kissing you have 1% of getting it
If you have an open sore in your mouth, and he does too, and his blood gets in your mouth, then yes.
andy is right. it has to be spread through blood or sexual fluids, so an open cut could do it. (by the way, there are tiny cuts in your mouth after brushing your teeth. they usually heal after half an hour or so.)
No you cant get AIDS by kissing deeply an AIDS patient, unless the AIDS patient is bleeding or has an open wound where you are kissing it, and then you might be able to get AIDS
When you are not sure, just avoid it.
no, it only through intercourse , blood transfusion or the needle which has been used by an aids patient. if the patient has any open injury in his/her mouth then there may be some chances.
yes i think you can because there is bodily fluids there so yes i do think so also if you have sex with them you can and if you have a cut or something in your mount you and if that person blood gets in a cut of yours
nope
aids only spreads by blood transfusion
you'll have to **** her/him
one of my teachers told me that even if their blood comes in contact with ur open wound, once the blood hits oxygen it kills the virus. he said there could be a bottle of infected blood, u could pour it on ur cut hand, and nothin would happen, i still wouldnt reccomend trying it tho. and i have heard the same things about kissing with aids.
If kissing deeply means to **** deep into vagina, then it can contract d disease.
Any type of oral kissing can't cause AIDS.
When I was in nursing school, someone in my class ask the teacher the same question... her response was....
take a bath tub and fill it up with saliva from an HIV+ patient, now drink that through a straw (yuck) and then there's a risk of gett HIV through saliva (pending there are no cuts/open sores)
Yes through saliva.
This report reveals flaw in transmission theory for HIV:
NATIONAL NEWS | washingtonblade.com

CDC data show no risk of HIV in lesbian sex
Sex with men, drug use are main transmitters

By ELIZABETH A. PERRY
Jul. 14, 2006

Women who have sex with women face the lowest risk of contracting HIV than any other group of the sexually active population, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.

“We are not aware of any confirmed cases,” said Dr. Patrick Sullivan, acting deputy director for science with the CDC’s Division of AIDS Prevention.

But that fact comes with a few caveats: Women who have sex with HIV-positive men or share intravenous drug needles with a person with AIDS are engaging in high-risk activities. Blood transfusions and artificial insemination also can raise the stakes.

“But over the last couple of decades there has been a sustained systematic effort to understand the transmission risk of women having sex with other women,” Sullivan said. “If the CDC becomes aware of HIV-infected women who have sex with other women, the health department will try to understand how the transmission occurred.”

It’s still theoretically possible for women to contract the disease from each other, according to unpublished statistical data included in the CDC’s updated fact sheet “HIV/AIDS among women who have sex with women.”

Public health officials use the term “women who have sex with women” instead of “lesbian” because they said sexual practices and sexual identity mean different things to different people.

Statistics for the fact sheet were gathered by studying 246,461 women who were diagnosed with HIV as of December 2004. Of that number, 7,381 said they had sex with women, but had other risk factors, including injection drug use, sexual contact with infected men or a blood transfusion. Some 534 women who were sexually active exclusively with other women were diagnosed with HIV, but had another risk factor like intravenous drug use.

In an update to the 2004 figures, Dr. Kathleen McDavid, an epidemiologist with the CDC, said as of December 2005, more than 250,000 women had been diagnosed with HIV since the beginning of the AIDS epidemic.

“Through December 2005 there were fewer than 50 cases of women who had sex with other women, with no other risk factors,” she said. “These are the ones that were followed up on with the health department. Ninety percent of those [50] cases were found to have another risk factor.”

Sullivan said the most common means of transmission for women is intravenous drug use and sex with HIV-infected men. He said that AIDS counselors do the best they can with the information they are given at the time to identify risk factors, even if some of them do not emerge until a follow up visit.

“When a woman has just received a diagnosis, she might not be willing to talk about all the risk factors that might be present,” he said. “We know from initial reports that women who were diagnosed injected drugs or had sex with a male partner.”

Ryland Roane, supervisor of the Virginia Department of Health HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Hotline, said the CDC tries to track individual HIV cases of women who have had sex with men all the way back to 1978.

“But there doesn’t have to be a man somewhere,” he said. “It could be intravenous drug use.”



Lesbians not exempt
from sexual precautions

Beth Marschak, a health educator with the HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Hotline, said some women who identify as lesbian may have had sexual contact with men at some point in their lives, even if it was only once. Others have never been with men, but they might be surprised by some of the ways they can still be at risk.

Dr. Philippe Chiliade, medical director of the Whitman-Walker Clinic in metropolitan Washington, D.C., said he has only heard of one anecdotal case of an HIV-infected woman who had sex with another woman, but had no risk factors. He said the risk of HIV transmission between women is “extremely low,” however the theoretical possibility of transmission is greater during the first few months after a woman is infected.

“If one partner has a high viral load in her vaginal secretions she is a lot more contagious,” he said.

Chiliade said lesbians are not exempt from sexual precautions because there are many other STDs that are a lot easier for them to get, including chlamydia, gonorrhea, pelvic inflammatory disease, herpes and human papillomavirus.














What this article really says it that people who find themselves in these health situations LIE. One of the big problems with the health crisis that turned into the AIDS epidemic is LYING.

The gay community that was up in arms demanding a solution (they got it too - toxic drugs) refused to look at the true reasons that gays, among others, were getting sick -- drugs (poppers, meth, coke, heroin, whatever). Look at the reports last year of the super-"AIDS" virus by the crazy meth head. A virus does not make a person personably responsible. The virus theory was a convenient reason to excuse the excesses of the vibrant openly gay communities that were developing for the first time in the United States in San Francisco and New York primarily.

In the beginning of the health crisis, being Haitian, was a risk group. However, with further questioning, like in this study, many Haitians later admitted homosexuality, prostitution, **and** drug usage which was initially denied due to social stigma in their communities.

There are some people that will hold on to their lies to death. In this study 5 lesbians out of 50 lesbians out of 543 lesbians continuously denied any other risk factors.

Use your common sense. There is no virus to be spread.


During the lesbian sex act, it is common for partners to manually matsterbate themselves and their partner exchanging vaginal secretions. Fingernails can cause tears. Also, oral stimulation is common; you'd think within the past 25 years someone would have a mouth sore that would lead to transmission -- if the paradigm is correct.

Kiss away. 543 lesbians cannot be wrong.


Check out the Padian study too.


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