Wednesday, June 22, 2011

HIV Infection in Women

HIV Infection in Women

What are HIV and AIDS?

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) attacks the body's immune system. A healthy immune system is what keeps you from getting sick.

Because HIV damages your immune system, you are more likely to get sick from bacteria and viruses. It is also harder for your body to fight off these infections when you do get them, so you may have trouble getting better. HIV is the condition that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).

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How do women become infected with HIV?

HIV can only be passed from person to person through body fluids, such as blood, semen and vaginal fluid. Children born to infected mothers can also become infected during pregnancy. The most common ways HIV is passed are:
  • By having unprotected anal, vaginal or oral sex with an infected person.
  • By sharing needles and syringes for injecting drugs with an infected person.
More than half of women who have HIV got the infection from sexual partners. A woman can be infected by contact with a man or contact with another woman. When a woman has sex with an infected man, she has a high risk of getting HIV if a condom is not used properly. Ask your doctor for instructions on proper use of condoms.

HIV can't live very long outside the body, so you can't get it through casual contact. You can't get the virus by touching, shaking hands, hugging, swimming in a public pool, giving blood, or using hot tubs, public toilets, telephones, doorknobs or water fountains. You also can't get it from food, mosquitoes or other insects.

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Who is at risk for HIV infection?

In the early days of the AIDS epidemic, HIV infection appeared to be confined to certain groups, including intravenous drug users, men who have sex with other men and persons who have hemophilia (a blood-clotting disease that requires treatment with frequent blood transfusions). People who have hemophilia got HIV from receiving blood transfusions with donated blood that contained HIV. Blood donations are now tested for HIV, and HIV-infected blood donations are destroyed.

These days, HIV infection is much more widespread. Here is a list of people who are at high risk of HIV infection:
  • Men who have sex with other men.
  • Anyone who has multiple sex partners.
  • Anyone who has sex with a prostitute.
  • Anyone who shares needles using illegal injected drugs.
  • Anyone who exchanges sex for drugs or money.
  • Anyone who has a sexually transmitted disease.
  • Anyone who has had or currently has a sexual partner with any of the above risk factors.
Since most people who are infected with HIV appear healthy, a blood test for the virus is necessary to see who has the infection. People who have a positive blood test for HIV are called HIV-positive. Ask your doctor how to obtain confidential testing for HIV. Your doctor can help you understand what the test results mean.

The only 100% sure way to keep from getting the AIDS virus is to not have sex at all or to have sex only with a partner who does not have HIV infection. It is also important to avoid contact with human blood and other body fluids and not sharing needles.

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