Wednesday, March 30, 2011

How is HIV passed on?a

How is HIV passed on?

HIV is not a very infectious virus. It cannot pass through unbroken skin, or through the air like cold germs. It cannot be passed on through ordinary social contact. People with HIV and AIDS live and work with uninfected people without putting them at any risk.

There are three main ways in which HIV can pass from someone who has HIV to an uninfected person:
  • through having sexual intercourse (sex where the penis enters the vagina or anus), without using a condom or Femidom (the female condom)
  • through sharing drug injecting equipment
  • from a mother to her baby during pregnancy or birth, or through breastfeeding.


It is very uncommon for HIV to be passed on in any other way. However a small number of people have been infected from giving oral sex to a man with HIV (sucking his penis), and there have been a few cases of health care workers (doctors, nurses etc) being infected through accidents with needles while caring for patients with HIV.

In the past, people who were given blood transfusions, blood factor treatments (for haemophilia) or organ transplants sometimes became infected because the donor had HIV. All blood and organ donations in the UK are now screened to prevent this happening, though it is still a risk in some parts of the world.

No comments:

Post a Comment