Transmission

HIV is quite a difficult virus to transmit. Infection can only happen when infected bodily fluids come into contact with broken skin or mucous membrane (such as those in the rectum, penis or vagina). The bodily fluid needs to contain enough virus to be infectious. Those fluids are blood (including menstrual blood), semen, vaginal fluid, rectal fluids, and breast milk. There is not enough HIV in saliva, urine or tears for it to be infectious.

HIV is most commonly transmitted via unprotected sexual intercourse. Sharing needles when using drugs is also very risky. You can protect yourself from HIV by practicing safer  sex and safer use .

The risk of HIV transmission is higher if there is a large amount of virus in the blood and bodily fluids. This is the case two to four weeks after an initial HIV infection, when the virus is replicating itself very rapidly.

The risk is much smaller when there is only a small amount of virus in the blood, for example when HIV therapy is preventing the virus from replicating.

Table of Contents:

  1. Part 1: Transmission
  2. Part 2: Risks from sex
  3. Part 3: Risks when using drugs
  4. Part 4: Mother–to-child transmission
  5. Part 5: Particular risks
  6. Part 6: No risk
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