Yes. Also, you can have a baby that is born without HIV.
Some people decide that they want to do the natural way of birth and there is no guarantee that the person who is HIV- will be infected this way. You can also do invitro and surrogates from what I understand and give birth to a healthy baby.
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Absolutely not. HIV spreads blood to blood. It spreads through male homosexual activity. It spreads through sexual intercourse from male to female and from female to uncircumcised male. It spreads through shared needles. It spreads through the milk of a mother with HIV to her baby.
You can get HIV from an infected male from unprotected sex or sharing of needles.
Human is male and female, man and woman, child, infant..... a person.
Having unprotected sex, by he sucking her penis and coming in his mouth.
It is on the X Chromosome (male have XY chromosome Females have XX Chromosome)
The transmission of HIV occurs when a person is exposed to HIV+ body fluid. In order to transmit infection, the fluid must come in fluid-to-fluid contact (blood-to-blood) or with a mucuous membrane. During vaginal sex, the woman is exposed to semen, however a female's vaginal fluid does not necessarily penetrate the intact skin of the male. Among sexual behaviors, HIV is least likely to be past from a female to a male through heterosexual vaginal intercourse.
yes male pee is much stronger, smarter, and generally more agreable than female pee.
Female female male male female Male male male female Male male female
Yes, you can have sex. Or some of your blood can pass on to another person causing them to have HIV.
The most common way to pass on HIV person to person is by sexual contact.
Safely for whom? Safely for the baby? Probably yes. Mother to child transmission can be greatly reduced with the correct regime of ARV's. Speak to a Dr. Safely for the HIV negative male? Probably no. Safely for the HIV positive female? If you keep your CD4 count high by taking your ARV's properly and keep otherwise healthy, then probably yes. Speak to a Dr.