Yes
With the medications today there is a very small risk that you do that. I think it's like only 5% risk. You just have to stick to them and the baby should be fine.
Yes; that is possible.
In order to have a baby with HIV, the mother must be HIV positive. When a woman realizes she is pregnant it is important for her to be tested for HIV. If she is HIV+, there are treatments available that can nearly eliminate the risk of her child being infected.
Not if the woman is not infected with HIV.
No; a man can't get HIV from a healthy woman (by healthy I assume you mean HIV free). A woman (or man) can look healthy, but be infected with the virus.
HIV can be transmitted through breast milk when a mother who is infected with the virus breastfeeds her baby. The virus can pass from the mother's milk to the baby's bloodstream, increasing the risk of the baby becoming infected with HIV.
No
There is no difference in looks with a woman infected or not with HIV.
Placenta and breast milk. Most HIV woman will take anti-retrovirals during pregnancy,give birth via Cesarean and not breast feed. This reduces transmission risk to 0.8% (UK standard of care)
You can't from casual contact from the baby. If exposed to the blood, then it is possible.
Yes, you CAN but it isn't definite
HIV and Aids are spread by exchange of body fluids mostly through sexual intercourse and infected needles used by drug addicts. However a baby can still get HIV then AIDS from her mother.
Yes, HIV can be transmitted through breast milk from an infected mother to her baby.