The short answer is "No". HIV is spread by certain bodily fluids, (blood, seminal fluids, vaginal fluids and breast milk).
If you picked up someone else's spoon first they would have to have HIV and there would have to be bodily fluid on the spoon (spit doesn't pass the virus well at all) and you would have to have an opening or cut in or on your mouth.
The chances are very very low that HIV could pass on a spoon.
HIV isn't spread through sharing of food.
You can't get HIV from sharing contact lenses. You can spread infections that way that can affect your vision. Get your own lenses.
You prevent aids by not getting infected by HIV. HIV is spread through body fluids. Avoiding sexual contact and contact with blood through sharing needles and transfusions can go a long way toward preventing it.
HIV is only spread via unprotected sex, sharing IV drugs, blood transfusions, and mother to child
You can't get HIV AIDS from using the same bathroom.
HIV Aids is an incurable retro-viral infections spread by unprotected sexual intercourse between both hetero and homosexual couples. Also can be transmitted via needle sharing with an infected drug user. It cannot be spread by contact or by airborne virus particles.
Not unless youre masturbating together with someone who has HIV.
You can't get HIV from sharing shoes, clothes, combs, or drinks. HIV isn't spread by casual or household contact.
There is no cure for AIDS or HIV. You get HIV then develop AIDS. It's kind of like getting a cold then sneezing as a symptom where the cold is HIV and the sneezing is AIDS. You can not have AIDS but not having HIV. Using protection during sex, not sharing needles, and staying away from blood can lower your chance of getting HIV.
As far as having sex goes: Anal sex is the most dangerous type of sex for the spread of HIV/AIDS. This is because there is usually more blood present(which is one of the fluids that transmit HIV/AIDS). Vaginal would come second in line and oral third.
High risk behaviors that spread HIV are unprotected sex and sharing needles.
AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is not contagious. It is a diagnosis of someone with severely low immune function as a result of advanced HIV infection. HIV (Human Immunedeficiency Virus) is the virus that causes a person to develop AIDS. HIV is spread through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk. Coughing and sneezing does not present a risk for the transmission of HIV.