No.
Yes, HIV can be transmitted through breast milk from an infected mother to her baby.
Yes, HIV can be transmitted through breast milk from an infected mother to her baby.
no
Yes. Saliva is a body fluid and in certain circumstances HIV can be transmitted through it.No, there is not enough HIV in saliva to be transmitted.
No. HIV is only transmitted through body fluids from someone infected with HIV.
HIV can be transmitted through breast milk when a mother living with HIV passes the virus to her baby through breastfeeding. The virus can be present in breast milk and can infect the baby if the mother is not on antiretroviral treatment.
Yes, HIV can be transmittted fairly easily.
No, you can't get HIV from kissing or spitting. Exception is if the saliva has blood in it.
Yes, HIV can be transmitted from a mother to her baby through breastfeeding if the mother is infected with the virus.
If the skin is not a mucus membrane, or the genital area, then if you had intact skin HIV can't be transmitted. You could hold HIV infected blood in your hand, with intact skin, and it wouldn't be transmitted.
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.
Yes, AIDS can be transmitted through breast milk from an HIV-positive mother to her child.