HIV/AIDS risk at adjectives?

Hi, I have been worried sick lately because of the fear that I might own been "exposed" to HIV. I work at a hospital for a doctor, and a patient whom I helped required to shake hands with me. He had some blood on his hand, but I'm pretty sure it was dried blood because there was 100 percent no blood on my hand after i shaked hands with him. However, I play tennis, and there be a blister on my hand from holding the racket. (The blister was a everyday sized one, that kind of hurt but was not blatantly bleeding. I tried squeezing it, but no real blood come out) Is it possible that I could have gotten the virus? What are the chances I did? I told the doctor i was working for nearly this, and he said there was nothing to verbs about, but I just want to make extra sure. Thanks profoundly.
Answers:    The virus cannot live outside of the body for very long at all. If the blood was dried, next the virus was probably dead anyway. And you didn't get any blood on your foot, so I don't think you need to worry roughly speaking anything. But if it makes you feel better, go obtain tested! I've been tested for it twice and I've never even thought I've come close to being exposed to it lol.. But maybe continue a few months because there is a window of inactivity after exposure that can ultimate up to three months, and during this time, the test can come out negative if you are positive for HIV. So if you wanted to be positive, i.e. certainly an option.

your mind. You did not contract the virus.


Incidentally, you did not mention that the patient even HAD HIV/AIDS. If HE didn't have it, consequently YOU could not have contracted it.


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