your fine -______-
AIDS will only be transferred through serious bodily fluids, such as blood. Nothing like saliva.
No only by blood contact.
Yes. I don't suggest sharing chewing gum with a person that had aids.
No you will acquire it from sharing a towel. AIDS is an STD or sexually transmitted disease so you can only acquire it upon sexual intercourse. Even sharing spoon or kissing the person cannot transmit the virus to you. You can also acquire the disease upon blood transfusion if you received a blood from an infected person or even if the needle used to you was used by an infected person.
NO
sharing needles used for injection drugs
NO
Certainly not.HIV can be passed on through unprotected sex with an infected person, through a blood transfusion, or sharing an hypodermic needle with an infected person. Even if you drink the blood of an infected person you will not be affected. The virus can not get into your blood from your stomach. However, it can enter through cuts and sores in the mouth.Read the question "How is HIV transmitted" in the Related Questions below.
Having two wives does not cause a man to have HIV or AIDS. You contract HIV (the precursor to AIDS) by having sex with or sharing blood (through needles, etc) with a person who is already infected.If the man's wives do not have HIV, he won't get it from them, but he could stille contract it by having sex or sharing blood with someone else.
Nothing. Your chance of contracting HIV from sharing a glass is zero. The amount of saliva that you would have to ingest is several gallons. So, unless they are a really slobbery and sloppy drinker and you get gallons of their saliva - almost an impossible task - you should not worry about sharing a drink with an HIV infected friend.
HIV is only spread via unprotected sex, sharing IV drugs, blood transfusions, and mother to child
It depends how 'social' it gets. Unprotected sex with an infected person, sharing hypodermics with same etc
HPV is usually passed by some sort of sexual contact. A person needs to either have sex with someone who has the virus or have some sort of skin to skin contact with the area (warts). A person can NOT get HPV from sitting on a toilet seat, shower, sharing drinks or food, a pool, etc. Check out this site for more information on HPV: http://www.cdc.gov/std/HPV/STDFact-HPV.htm