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Will I get HIV/AIDS?


I went into the boys bathroom, I went into the stall, and there was this dry subtance on the toliet seat, I got a paper towl to wipe it off, and I think I might of accidently touched it, will get HIV/AIDS from this?

Steve are you kidding? Water cant give you aids. Your probay just trying to scare me.

You can only get HIV or AIDS from exchanging bodily fluids with someone or sharing needles-blood,sperm,vaginal secretions open cuts with the exchange of blood.

Did you have a cut, even a really small cut. I had a slight rip in my rectum and dropped a duce in this toliet and the water splashed and hit my hole. Now I have aids. Good luck.

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Can I get HIV from casual contact (shaking hands, hugging, using a toilet, drinking from the same glass, or the sneezing and coughing of an infected person)?


En Espa帽ol
No. HIV is not transmitted by day-to-day contact in the workplace, schools, or social settings. HIV is not transmitted through shaking hands, hugging, or a casual kiss. You cannot become infected from a toilet seat, a drinking fountain, a door knob, dishes, drinking glasses, food, or pets.

HIV is not an airborne or food-borne virus, and it does not live long outside the body. HIV can be found in the blood, semen, or vaginal fluid of an infected person. The three main ways HIV is transmitted are

through having sex (anal, vaginal, or oral) with someone infected with HIV.
through sharing needles and syringes with someone who has HIV.
through exposure (in the case of infants) to HIV before or during birth, or through breast feeding.
For more information about HIV transmission, see "HIV and Its Transmission."

Although contact with blood and other body substances can occur in households, transmission of HIV is rare in this setting. A small number of transmission cases have been reported in which a person became infected with HIV as a result of contact with blood or other body secretions from an HIV-infected person in the household. For information on these cases refer to the May 20, 1994 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 鈥淗uman Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission in Household Settings 鈥?United States.鈥?br>
Persons living with HIV and persons providing home care for those living with HIV should be fully educated and trained regarding appropriate infection-control procedures.

You may view and/or download "Caring for Someone with AIDS at Home."

For more information on about providing home care or living with a person who is HIV-infected, visit the CDC National Prevention Information Network (NPIN) Web site, or call NPIN at 1-800-458-5231.





Topics

African Americans

Basic Information

Global HIV/AIDS

Funding

Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM)

Prevention Programs

Statistics & Surveillance

Testing

Women

More Topics...


Resources by Format

Questions & Answers

Fact Sheets

Brochures

Slide Sets

Podcasts

Software

Journal Articles

Reports

Recommendations & Guidelines

Other Documents


LEGEND:

Link to a PDF document

Link to non-governmental site and does not necessarily represent the views of the CDC



Adobe Acrobat (TM) Reader needs to be installed on your computer in order to read documents in PDF format. Download the Reader.

Can I get HIV from casual contact (shaking hands, hugging, using a toilet, drinking from the same glass, or the sneezing and coughing of an infected person)?


En Espa帽ol
No. HIV is not transmitted by day-to-day contact in the workplace, schools, or social settings. HIV is not transmitted through shaking hands, hugging, or a casual kiss. You cannot become infected from a toilet seat, a drinking fountain, a door knob, dishes, drinking glasses, food, or pets.

HIV is not an airborne or food-borne virus, and it does not live long outside the body. HIV can be found in the blood, semen, or vaginal fluid of an infected person. The three main ways HIV is transmitted are

through having sex (anal, vaginal, or oral) with someone infected with HIV.
through sharing needles and syringes with someone who has HIV.
through exposure (in the case of infants) to HIV before or during birth, or through breast feeding.
For more information about HIV transmission, see "HIV and Its Transmission."

Although contact with blood and other body substances can occur in households, transmission of HIV is rare in this setting. A small number of transmission cases have been reported in which a person became infected with HIV as a result of contact with blood or other body secretions from an HIV-infected person in the household. For information on these cases refer to the May 20, 1994 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 鈥淗uman Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission in Household Settings 鈥?United States.鈥?br>
Persons living with HIV and persons providing home care for those living with HIV should be fully educated and trained regarding appropriate infection-control procedures.

You may view and/or download "Caring for Someone with AIDS at Home."

For more information on about providing home care or living with a person who is HIV-infected, visit the CDC National Prevention Information Network (NPIN) Web site, or call NPIN at 1-800-458-5231.





Topics

African Americans

Basic Information

Global HIV/AIDS

Funding

Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM)

Prevention Programs

Statistics & Surveillance

Testing

Women

More Topics...


Resources by Format

Questions & Answers

Fact Sheets

Brochures

Slide Sets

Podcasts

Software

Journal Articles

Reports

Recommendations & Guidelines

Other Documents


LEGEND:

Link to a PDF document

Link to non-governmental site and does not necessarily represent the views of the CDC



Adobe Acrobat (TM) Reader needs to be installed on your computer in order to read documents in PDF format. Download the Reader.

Can I get HIV from casual contact (shaking hands, hugging, using a toilet, drinking from the same glass, or the sneezing and coughing of an infected person)?


En Espa帽ol
No. HIV is not transmitted by day-to-day contact in the workplace, schools, or social settings. HIV is not transmitted through shaking hands, hugging, or a casual kiss. You cannot become infected from a toilet seat, a drinking fountain, a door knob, dishes, drinking glasses, food, or pets.

HIV is not an airborne or food-borne virus, and it does not live long outside the body. HIV can be found in the blood, semen, or vaginal fluid of an infected person. The three main ways HIV is transmitted are

through having sex (anal, vaginal, or oral) with someone infected with HIV.
through sharing needles and syringes with someone who has HIV.
through exposure (in the case of infants) to HIV before or during birth, or through breast feeding.
For more information about HIV transmission, see "HIV and Its Transmission."

Although contact with blood and other body substances can occur in households, transmission of HIV is rare in this setting. A small number of transmission cases have been reported in which a person became infected with HIV as a result of contact with blood or other body secretions from an HIV-infected person in the household. For information on these cases refer to the May 20, 1994 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 鈥淗uman Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission in Household Settings 鈥?United States.鈥?br>
Persons living with HIV and persons providing home care for those living with HIV should be fully educated and trained regarding appropriate infection-control procedures.

You may view and/or download "Caring for Someone with AIDS at Home."

For more information on about providing home care or living with a person who is HIV-infected, visit the CDC National Prevention Information Network (NPIN) Web site, or call NPIN at 1-800-458-5231.

NO. You will not get HIV/AIDS from a dry, unidentified spot that you may or may not have touched. It's good that you are concerned for your health and are aware of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, but don't drive yourself nuts worrying about every little thing. If you use good personal hygiene and NEVER have unprotected sex, you will most likely never have an STD. But, remember that oral and anal sex also require you to protect yourself. You can get many STD's in your mouth, throat and rectum.

no unless u licked it with u r tongue

the virus cant survive out the body it dies with in minutes....so it would have to be fresh blood mabey with in the minute and u would have to have an open cut or wound and that means u would have to jump on the toilet right after the person befor u....and steve your an asshole i never heard no **** like that

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  AIDS Information   HIV AIDS   AIDS Drug   AIDS Research   AIDS Transmission   AIDS Cure   AIDS Treatment   AIDS Symptom
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