No.
The HIV virus is spread through the exchange of bodily fluid, such as blood, urine, etc. The only way that you could get HIV from food and/or water is if there was a significant amount of blood or other bodily fluid contained in it. And as for the water, you would have to have an open cut on your body and have the blood come in contact with it for you to become infected. If you swallowed water containing blood, there is a slight possibility of you becoming infected. If you are concerned about obtaining HIV from a friend or someone close to you:
1)Do not have sexual intercourse with them (This includes all kinds of sex i.e. oral, anal, etc.
2) Do not share needles or other objects that penetrate the skin.
3) Don't touch blood or bodily fluid of the infected person(s)
4)If you are really concerned, avoid drinking/eating after the person(s) due to the slight chance they may have a sore in their mouth; thus transferring it to the utensil they are using, in consequence, when you use it it is transferred to you. (And you could be infected if you have a sore as well.)
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You need many microliters of virus to become infected; so drinking from the same glass is really not a risk but tongue-kissing (exchanging saliva) is a risk.
It Acutually do so the answer is TrueHIV isn't spread through sharing of food.
HIV is an infectious disease. It is not spread through genetics.
Yes, HIV can be spread through breast milk from an infected mother to her baby.
No, HIV cannot spread through the air, water, or food. The virus is primarily transmitted through specific bodily fluids, such as blood, semen, vaginal fluids, and breast milk, typically via unprotected sexual contact, sharing needles, or from mother to child during childbirth or breastfeeding. It is not airborne and does not survive long outside the human body, making transmission through environmental sources highly unlikely.
No, HIV is not easily spread through simple casual contact. HIV is spread when bodily fluids come in direct contact with the bloodstream of another person.
By blood
No infection from cooking or serving food ...the only way to get infected are 1- sex . 2- blood transfer. 3- Mother to newborn baby ............................................................................................................
No it can not.
NO. its a pathogen that is transmitted only through bodily fluids other then the digestive tract
Yes, HIV can be transmitted from a mother to her baby through breastfeeding if the mother is infected with the virus.
If the person is infected with HIV, it is not likely via saliva only you would contract the virus. But if HIV contaminated blood is in the saliva, then it is possible to get HIV.
HIV is spread through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk. Preventing the spread of HIV requires avoiding contact with infected body fluids.