Casual Contact
No. That kind of contact with someone who has HIV could transfer the infection.
HIV, the retrovirus that causes AIDS, is present in the semen, vaginal secretions, blood, breast milk, and in the amniotic fluid of an infected person. Contact with these fluids can cause a person to become infected with HIV. However, the saliva of an infected person is generally considered safe (unless contaminated with blood/the non-infected person has open wounds in their mouth).
Saliva has no Aids or HIV in an infected person but everything else can spread the virus.
The bad kind. HIV/AIDS. Between 1,400,000 and 1,800,000 adults were living with HIV/AIDS by the end of 2007.
It depends on what kind of illness it is. If it is something like the flu, mono, the common cold or some other type of communicable disease spread through casual contact, then you should try to stop the spread of the disease, but you will most likely not be sued. If it is something that can be prevented, like AIDS, then yes, you could be sued in civil court or charged with a crime.
Type your answer here... retrovirus
No she does not!! What kind of question is this?
aids
they get abs and start singing about aids
super aids
Proteins
your mother man