Very unlikely, unless you have had other exposures to the HIV since you last tested.
If you were asked whether you were HIV positive/negative, you will need to be retested to make sure.
No, he has also done a documentary called HIV and Me and in the film gets tested but comes back negative.
There is little to no chance that you contracted HIV during that risky exposure. After an exposure to the HIV virus, it can take up to 6 months for you to seroconvert, meaning that the virus becomes detectable in the blood stream. Generally speaking, if you have negative testing 180 days after the exposure, you are considered to be non-infected from that exposure and do not need further testing. However, if there is a chance that you were exposed again in that 6 month waiting period, you may still be at risk. Meaning that if for example you had sex with an HIV + person 1 month ago, you may have contracted the virus then and have to wait another six months. If the only exposure you had was 175 days ago and you tested negative, then you are not infected from that exposure.
You don't have HIV. Congratulations!! (just between you and me that one seemed pretty obvious)
A negative HIV test means that a person is not showing evidence of infection with HIV. A negative test may also occur in the "window period" between infection and the time when the test may be expected to turn positive.
The patient is not tested for HIV prior to surgery.
Nurses are not routinely tested for HIV for employment in the US. HIV is not a barrier to working in the health care industry.
It is tested to determine if the body is producing antibodies to HIV.
A HIV negative person can not be a carrier of HIV.
Gonorrhea and HIV have the same risk factors. Patients with HIV should be tested annually for gonorrhea. All patients with gonorrhea should be tested for HIV.
Relief happens if you are HIV negative.
Assumptions are a very dangerous thing to make when dealing with terminal illnesses. You should both get tested if you want to know your status.