If you have become disable as a result, file for SSD, which includes a separate child benefit check. If you are working, however are faced with rising medical bills, these can be considered in a support modification under a Rebuttable Presumption. see links below
No.
Go back to court. The two--support and visitation--are usually not connected. Lately, drugs have had some effect on HIV and the other parent may become able to work again in time. Your child should be able to visit safely.
no it cant because hiv isn't a disease that has something to do with the child's mouth
It is actually still possible that your child will not contact HIV from you, even though it is unlikely.
The motto of Born HIV Free is 'End mother to child transmission of HIV by 2015'.
Parents should be aware that their children are getting tested for HIV to be prepared for the social consequences should the child test positive.There is still great stigma against HIV positive people and the parents may need to be there to protect and support their child. The parents can also help to better explain the condition and also how to deal with the condition on a daily basis (especially if and when daily medication will be required to help control the disease).Depending on their age, knowing that their child is getting tested for HIV may inform parents that their child is sexually active. This allows parents to discuss safe sexual practices to their children, and also enlighten them to other issues related to sexual intercourse including other sexually transmitted infections/diseases as well as pregnancy.
Early detection can help the long-term health of a person infected with HIV
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) is transmitted through contact with blood, semen, vaginal fluid and breast milk. HIV is also able to be passed from mother-to-child. AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is a diagnosis that someone who is The HIV status of the father is irrelevant as it relates to the HIV status of the mother. This is going to get really complicated, so I hope that I can explain it in a way that reads well. The HIV status of the mother may have an impact however. If you consider that a father with an AIDS diagnosis would be HIV+, he would have had sex with the child's mother at least one time. Although each sexual exposure to an HIV positive person does not result in transmission of the virus, each exposure carries a certain degree of risk for infection. If the mother is HIV negative and completely disengages with any "at-risk" contact with the HIV+ father, the child will be born negative and remain that way. If the mother were to become infected, the child is at risk for HIV infection in several ways. It is possible to transmit HIV to newborns during childbirth, although it is just as likely for women with HIV to give birth to HIV- children. If a child is not born HIV+, but the HIV+ mother breastfeeds, the child will once again be at risk for infection as a result of contact with HIV+ breast milk. In the Unites States, women who seek medical care during pregnancy are routinely tested for HIV. If a woman tests HIV positive during pregnancy, there are many treatment options that can almost eliminate the risk of transmitting the virus from mother-to-child.
There is not a cure for HIV but there are treatments available to help with it.
Gecko doesn't help to cure HIV.
yes i will abode.........because hiv do not spread by touching........and without physical relation
Transmission of HIV from mother-to-child can occur during pregnancy or after birth during breastfeeding. With routine HIV testing of pregnant mothers the occurance of this is low.