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Better Safe Than Sorry
While having sex, you and your partner will only be safe if you avoid contact with every bodily fluid (blood, semen -also pre-cum- and vaginal secretions). Because of this, it’s absolutely necessary to use a physical barrier such as a condom in every sexual encounter because the skin of the mouth, vagina, penis and anus is so delicate that it might have some tiny cuts or sores that can act as an open door for HIV infection -or other STD infections.
Risky Business
Of course it always pays to play safe, but there are situations that are extra risky:
- When you are into multiple partners, the risk they might be HIV+ grows.
- Using drugs and/or drinking lots of alcohol completely changes your perception and can make you act differently than you would when sober. Don’t kid yourself: it happens!
- Injected drugs put you at a higher risk when you share the equipment. To be safe from HIV-infections, new, clean and sterile needles and syringes are requested for every injection.
- Having anal sex makes you more vulnerable to get an infection, as the anus has an extremely delicate skin.
- When you live in country with a high HIV infection rate and the access to condoms is lacking, the best you can do is not have sex. Whether this is realistic is another story, but don’t say that you haven’t been warned!
Transmission
You can contract HIV when blood, semen -including pre-cum- or vaginal secretions get in contact with your blood stream. Most HIV-infection cases occur from unprotected sex (vaginal, anal or oral) with a HIV+ person. But there are also other ways, like sharing needles/syringes or during pregnancy, childbirth or breast feeding if the mother is HIV +. All other social contacts are totally safe, as there are no other ways of HIV-infections apart from the ones mentioned above. To finish, a common sense tip: use a new condom every time you have sex! Recycling is all good and well, but not when your health and that of your partner might be at stake.
Who Gets HIV?
Everyone can get infected by HIV, because the virus doesn’t discriminate. The infection hasn’t stopped growing since 25 years and it affects more and more young people (almost half of the people infected last year were between 15 and 24 years old). Unprotected sex and sharing drug needles and syringes make you more vulnerable to get infected. As HIV/AIDS isn’t written on your face, it’s almost impossible to know who has the disease, so protection is always needed. at stake.
Get The Test And Put Your Mind At Rest
Getting the HIV test is the best - and only way to know of you are HIV+. If you think you have been at risk, get tested. A negative result will be great of course, but if it's positive, at least you will have acces to the right treatment as soon as possible -and you life with the disease will be less difficult and longer. HIV infection can be detected withitn three months of exposure to the virus, but it can sometimes take up to six months to detect it properly. To be 100% sure, get tested six months after the risky situation - and meanwhile, practice safe sex.
What To Do When You Get Your Results
First of all keep calm, worrying doesn’t really help; when you get your HIV-test results you’ll have to face them, whatever the outcome is.
1. You are HIV-Keep on practising safe sex by using condoms properly. In drug- injection cases, you must be sure your equipment has been sterilized before using it. You should get tested again six months later to confirm your results.
2. You are HIV+Get medical treatment as soon as possible in order to protect your health and delay AIDS from developing. The next thing to do is to contact a specialist in treating HIV, as well as find a support system which can help you psychologically. Your habits in drug consumption, alcohol drinking or smoking must decrease because they can weaken your immune system - please be good to your body. Finally, make you sure that you have not been infected by tuberculosis at the same time you got HIV (they often happen together); get tested soon, as that way you can take a successful treatment for TBC straight away.
1. You are HIV-Keep on practising safe sex by using condoms properly. In drug- injection cases, you must be sure your equipment has been sterilized before using it. You should get tested again six months later to confirm your results.
2. You are HIV+Get medical treatment as soon as possible in order to protect your health and delay AIDS from developing. The next thing to do is to contact a specialist in treating HIV, as well as find a support system which can help you psychologically. Your habits in drug consumption, alcohol drinking or smoking must decrease because they can weaken your immune system - please be good to your body. Finally, make you sure that you have not been infected by tuberculosis at the same time you got HIV (they often happen together); get tested soon, as that way you can take a successful treatment for TBC straight away.