Very Rapidly. You won't see simptoms of it for two years.
there is no cure for aids .
About 1.1 people in the United States are infected with HIV/AIDS
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The same way that straight people develop AIDS: having unprotected sex with multiple sexual partners and being infected with HIV.The same way straight men get aids, sex
AIDS drugs are tested on people infected with the disease.
Std, Aids , blood borne disease , infected cow.
Answer this question… Improved transportation has led to infected people quickly spreading diseases around the world.
AIDS has nothing to do with age. You can be born with AIDS if your mother has it. You can get it any time by contact with infected body fluid like blood or semen. The most common way to get AIDS is by unprotected sex.
You don't actually "get" AIDS. You might get infected with HIV, and later you might develop AIDS. You can get infected with HIV from anyone who's infected, even if they don't look sick and even if they haven't tested HIV-positive yet. The blood, vaginal fluid, semen, and breast milk of people infected with HIV has enough of the virus in it to infect other people. Most people get the HIV virus by: * having sex with an infected person * sharing a needle (shooting drugs) with someone who's infected * being born when their mother is infected, or drinking the breast milk of an infected woman Getting a transfusion of infected blood used to be a way people got AIDS, but now the blood supply is screened very carefully and the risk is extremely low.
ANY age can be affected by HIV AIDS. You could be in your 90s and get infected, or if you were born from an infected mother, you could be born infected.
Yes. Everyone who is infected with HIV is a carrier and infectious. Most people who become infected with HIV will not initially know or notice that they have been infected, but some will suffer symptoms of a short seroconversion illness when they develop HIV antibodies (generally two to six weeks after HIV exposure). Seroconversion illness can be similar to (and can be easily mistaken for) flu, glandular fever, tonsillitis or a serious herpes attack, but is rarely severe enough to require hospitalisation or even result in an immediate HIV diagnosis. The speed at which an untreated person will go on to develop AIDS varies greatly, but most people will remain asymptomatic for several years (it is estimated that around half the people with HIV develop AIDS within 10 years of becoming infected).
No, birth control pills can not protect you from AIDS. The only protection is to use a condom, every time, or not have sex at all. strictly speaking you are not infected by AIDS. The infection is HIV which may or may not develop into AIDS in the future. there are people who have been living with HIV for 20 years or more who have not (yet) developed AIDS.