HIV does not prevent menstruation. Women with HIV still have periods.
HIV does not prevent women from having periods. If a woman was getting periods before getting HIV, periods are likely to continue until menopause.
Not if the woman is not infected with HIV.
No; a man can't get HIV from a healthy woman (by healthy I assume you mean HIV free). A woman (or man) can look healthy, but be infected with the virus.
No, being HIV positive will not delay your period. Having AIDS can sometimes cause problems with a woman's menstrual cycles but even then that's not always the case. For the record tampon use is not encouraged if you do have AIDS as there is a higher risk of problems.
A woman is just as likely to get HIV from a military man as she is to get it from someone who is not in the armed forces.
In order to have a baby with HIV, the mother must be HIV positive. When a woman realizes she is pregnant it is important for her to be tested for HIV. If she is HIV+, there are treatments available that can nearly eliminate the risk of her child being infected.
Placenta and breast milk. Most HIV woman will take anti-retrovirals during pregnancy,give birth via Cesarean and not breast feed. This reduces transmission risk to 0.8% (UK standard of care)
No , if a some people are HIV positive it means they aren't clean and you will be risk to contact with them.
If your HIV test result was negative, and you've had no new risky exposures since the test, and if you are not in the window period, you can consider yourself free from HIV. The window period the time between infection with HIV and the time when the test will become positive.
Between 4-10 days. It's different for every woman.
No. If neither one of you has HIV, you can't give it to each other.
HIV is spread through bodily fluids, say a woman has HIV and a man has sex with her unprotected, her fluids get inside his urethra (pee hole) and he could contract HIV. You can also get HIV from open wounds if you have a sore or anything, and they have HIV and they are bleeding, or if their bodily fluids come in contact with the open sore