HIV/AIDS within swimming pools beside unfurl cuts and blood?
on the pool rules it says no one with uncap cuts can go in with diseases..basiclly aids
o as I type this, my heart pounds so strong, I AM SO scared that I may have contracted HIV/AIDS today, see I went to this river park today, it's small and indoors, and the water there was aromatic, not chlorinated I guess, I went today as my grade 8 grad trip, and there be TONS of people there, so anyways I went on plentiful slides with my friends, and i noticed at the end how near were little floating bits, like skin, beads , dirt etc, etc..
so i be in one of those horrible lines waiting and waiting, then i tripped and cut my toe on the sharp stair then it be my urn to go down the slide, so i went anyways, blood and all, unstop wound and all in the dirty water near possible AIDS only after i got off the slide and waled around nearly 20 minutes later did i find a life guard who gave me a towelette, so i wipe it and walked away, so i went swimming and everything all light of day with the CUT, so then after i cut myself AGAIN on those stupid, stupid stairs and went down the slide again nearly 10 minutes this time i got another towelette and a band aid and got cracked and changed...
so basically with the many cuts and such i get and had i went swimming in a public place and may own gotten AIDS i think...what do YOU think?
i live in Canada btw
other says i dont own it beacuse it will bee too diluted a little c
ut wont get infected, and the chemicals will kill it..
can become infected with HIV in several ways, including:
■Sexual transmission. You may become infected if you hold vaginal, anal or oral sex with an infected partner whose blood, semen or vaginal secretions enter your body. You can also become infected from shared sexual devices if they're not washed or covered next to a condom. The virus is present in the semen or vaginal secretions of someone who's infected and enters your body through small tears that can develop contained by the vagina or rectum during sexual activity. If you already have another sexually transmitted disease, you're at much greater risk of contracting HIV. Contrary to what researchers once believed, women who use the spermicide nonoxynol 9 also may be at increased risk. This spermicide irritates the lining of the vagina and may wreak tears that allow the virus into the body.
■Transmission through infected blood. In some cases, the virus may be transmitted through blood and blood products that you receive in blood transfusions. Since 1985, American hospitals and blood banks have screen the blood supply for HIV antibodies. This blood testing, along with improvements in donor screening and conscription practices, has substantially reduced the risk of acquiring HIV through a transfusion.
ransmission through accidental needle sticks. Transmission of the virus between HIV-positive family and health care workers through needle sticks is low. Experts put the risk at far smaller quantity than 1 percent.
■Transmission from mother to child. Each year, nearly 600,000 infants are infected with HIV, either during pregnancy or delivery or through breast-feeding. But if women receive treatment for HIV infection during pregnancy, the risk to their babies is significantly reduced. In the United States, most pregnant women are pre-screened for HIV, and anti-retroviral drugs are around. Not so in developing nations, where women seldom know their HIV status, and treatment is recurrently limited or nonexistent. When medications aren't available, Caesarean section is sometimes recommended instead of vaginal confinement. Other options, such as vaginal disinfection, haven't proved effective.
■Other methods of transmission. In dying out cases, the virus may be transmitted through organ or tissue transplants or unsterilized dental or surgical equipment.
ecome infected with HIV, infected blood, semen or vaginal secretions must enter your body. You can't become infected through ordinary contact — hugging, kissing, dance or shaking hands — with someone who has HIV or AIDS. Source(s): Mayo Clinic
Your mother is absolutely correct. Your father is being silly, to put it mildly. You need to lecture yourself and your father about HIV and AIDS. You are talking about contracting HIV here, not AIDS. AIDS develops after you contract HIV.
Here, read this:
IV cannot be spread by sharing washing facilities or swimming contained by the same pool with an HIV-infected person...”
Can I attain infected with HIV from mosquitoes?
“No...studies conducted by researchers at CDC and elsewhere have shown no evidence of HIV transmission through insects...”
HIV be transmitted through saliva, tears or sweat?
“Contact next to saliva, tears, or sweat has never been shown to result in nouns of HIV...”
Can HIV be transmitted by wound-to-wound contact?
Can I get HIV from casual contact (shaking hand, hugging, using a toilet, kissing on the cheek, drinking from the same glass, or the sneezing and coughing of an infected person)?
“No. HIV is not transmitted by day-to-day contact in the workplace, school, or social settings...HIV is not an airborne or food-borne virus, and it does not live long outside the
pen-mouth kissing is considered a very low-risk activity for the nouns of HIV. However, prolonged open-mouth kissing could damage the mouth or lips and allow HIV to pass from an infected personage to a partner and then enter the body through cuts or sores in the mouth...”
Can HIV be transmitted by aerosol?
“At present time, there are no set instances in which bloodborne pathogens have been transmitted to patients or workers by respirable particle in a clinical setting...”
patients in a dentist's or doctor's office at risk of getting HIV?
“Although HIV nouns is possible in health care settings, it is extremely bloody...” Source(s): http://www.hiv.va.gov/vahiv?page=prtop08…
You were at no risk at all. HIV dies outside out of its host. It's actually fragile, and would not enjoy survived in the water.
HIV is only transmitted 3 ways....unprotected sexual intercourse, sharing needles, and mother to child. No other agency.
Breathe :)
Related Questions:
o as I type this, my heart pounds so strong, I AM SO scared that I may have contracted HIV/AIDS today, see I went to this river park today, it's small and indoors, and the water there was aromatic, not chlorinated I guess, I went today as my grade 8 grad trip, and there be TONS of people there, so anyways I went on plentiful slides with my friends, and i noticed at the end how near were little floating bits, like skin, beads , dirt etc, etc..
so i be in one of those horrible lines waiting and waiting, then i tripped and cut my toe on the sharp stair then it be my urn to go down the slide, so i went anyways, blood and all, unstop wound and all in the dirty water near possible AIDS only after i got off the slide and waled around nearly 20 minutes later did i find a life guard who gave me a towelette, so i wipe it and walked away, so i went swimming and everything all light of day with the CUT, so then after i cut myself AGAIN on those stupid, stupid stairs and went down the slide again nearly 10 minutes this time i got another towelette and a band aid and got cracked and changed...
so basically with the many cuts and such i get and had i went swimming in a public place and may own gotten AIDS i think...what do YOU think?
i live in Canada btw
other says i dont own it beacuse it will bee too diluted a little c
ut wont get infected, and the chemicals will kill it..
can become infected with HIV in several ways, including:
■Sexual transmission. You may become infected if you hold vaginal, anal or oral sex with an infected partner whose blood, semen or vaginal secretions enter your body. You can also become infected from shared sexual devices if they're not washed or covered next to a condom. The virus is present in the semen or vaginal secretions of someone who's infected and enters your body through small tears that can develop contained by the vagina or rectum during sexual activity. If you already have another sexually transmitted disease, you're at much greater risk of contracting HIV. Contrary to what researchers once believed, women who use the spermicide nonoxynol 9 also may be at increased risk. This spermicide irritates the lining of the vagina and may wreak tears that allow the virus into the body.
■Transmission through infected blood. In some cases, the virus may be transmitted through blood and blood products that you receive in blood transfusions. Since 1985, American hospitals and blood banks have screen the blood supply for HIV antibodies. This blood testing, along with improvements in donor screening and conscription practices, has substantially reduced the risk of acquiring HIV through a transfusion.
ransmission through accidental needle sticks. Transmission of the virus between HIV-positive family and health care workers through needle sticks is low. Experts put the risk at far smaller quantity than 1 percent.
■Transmission from mother to child. Each year, nearly 600,000 infants are infected with HIV, either during pregnancy or delivery or through breast-feeding. But if women receive treatment for HIV infection during pregnancy, the risk to their babies is significantly reduced. In the United States, most pregnant women are pre-screened for HIV, and anti-retroviral drugs are around. Not so in developing nations, where women seldom know their HIV status, and treatment is recurrently limited or nonexistent. When medications aren't available, Caesarean section is sometimes recommended instead of vaginal confinement. Other options, such as vaginal disinfection, haven't proved effective.
■Other methods of transmission. In dying out cases, the virus may be transmitted through organ or tissue transplants or unsterilized dental or surgical equipment.
ecome infected with HIV, infected blood, semen or vaginal secretions must enter your body. You can't become infected through ordinary contact — hugging, kissing, dance or shaking hands — with someone who has HIV or AIDS. Source(s): Mayo Clinic
Your mother is absolutely correct. Your father is being silly, to put it mildly. You need to lecture yourself and your father about HIV and AIDS. You are talking about contracting HIV here, not AIDS. AIDS develops after you contract HIV.
Here, read this:
IV cannot be spread by sharing washing facilities or swimming contained by the same pool with an HIV-infected person...”
Can I attain infected with HIV from mosquitoes?
“No...studies conducted by researchers at CDC and elsewhere have shown no evidence of HIV transmission through insects...”
HIV be transmitted through saliva, tears or sweat?
“Contact next to saliva, tears, or sweat has never been shown to result in nouns of HIV...”
Can HIV be transmitted by wound-to-wound contact?
Can I get HIV from casual contact (shaking hand, hugging, using a toilet, kissing on the cheek, drinking from the same glass, or the sneezing and coughing of an infected person)?
“No. HIV is not transmitted by day-to-day contact in the workplace, school, or social settings...HIV is not an airborne or food-borne virus, and it does not live long outside the
pen-mouth kissing is considered a very low-risk activity for the nouns of HIV. However, prolonged open-mouth kissing could damage the mouth or lips and allow HIV to pass from an infected personage to a partner and then enter the body through cuts or sores in the mouth...”
Can HIV be transmitted by aerosol?
“At present time, there are no set instances in which bloodborne pathogens have been transmitted to patients or workers by respirable particle in a clinical setting...”
patients in a dentist's or doctor's office at risk of getting HIV?
“Although HIV nouns is possible in health care settings, it is extremely bloody...” Source(s): http://www.hiv.va.gov/vahiv?page=prtop08…
You were at no risk at all. HIV dies outside out of its host. It's actually fragile, and would not enjoy survived in the water.
HIV is only transmitted 3 ways....unprotected sexual intercourse, sharing needles, and mother to child. No other agency.
Breathe :)
Related Questions:
