Advertisement

How is HIV transmitted?

Don't know all the facts about how you can and can't get HIV? Find out now through this quick guide from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention and spread the information – not the virus.

HIV enters the body through open cuts, sores or breaks in the skin; through mucous membranes, such as those inside the anus or vagina; or through direct injection. There are several ways by which this can happen:

* Sexual contact with an infected person. Anal or vaginal intercourse without a condom with a partner who is either positive or does not know his or her HIV status account for the vast majority of sexually-transmitted HIV cases in the U.S. and elsewhere. Oral sex is not an efficient route of HIV transmission, but it can happen. Kissing, massage, masturbation and "hand jobs" do not spread HIV.

* Sharing needles, syringes or other injection equipment with someone who is infected.

* Mother-to-child transmission. Babies born to HIV-positive women can be infected with the virus before or during birth, or through breastfeeding after birth.

* Transmission in health care settings. Health care professionals have been infected with HIV in the workplace, usually after being stuck with needles or sharp objects containing HIV-infected blood. As for HIV-positive health care providers infecting their patients, there have only been six documented cases, all involving the same HIV-positive dentist in the 1980s.

* Transmission via donated blood or blood clotting factors. However, this is now very rare in countries where blood is screened for HIV antibodies, including in the United States.

HIV has been detected in saliva, tears and urine. However, HIV in these fluids is only found in extremely low concentrations. What's more, there hasn't been a single case of HIV transmission through these fluids reported. HIV cannot be transmitted through day-to-day activities such as shaking hands, hugging or casual kissing. You cannot become infected from a toilet seat, drinking fountain, or sharing food or eating utensils with someone who is positive. You also cannot get HIV from mosquitoes.
Since the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, new or potentially unknown routes of transmission have been thoroughly investigated by state and local health departments, in collaboration with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). To date, no additional routes of transmission have been recorded, despite a national system designed to detect unusual cases.

For more information about HIV transmission and other facts, visit http://www.cdc.gov/hiv.

Advertisement
Topics: News
Advertisement

From the Pride Source Marketplace

Go to the Marketplace
Directory default
Serving the MSU and OU communities with financial services including checking, VISA, mortgages,…
Learn More
Directory default
Worship Sunday at 9:30 am in-person and live-streamed on FacebookFellowship Activities and Wedding…
Learn More
6371483b71bc733830b9c593 placeholder team
Detroit Regional LGBT Chamber of Commerce MemberWelcome to Merithot. We’re a full-service creative…
Learn More
Advertisement