Tag Archives: HIV transmission

HIV Transmission: The Only 3 Confirmed Ways

Understanding how HIV is transmitted is the first step to reducing unnecessary anxiety. Contrary to common myths, HIV is not easily transmitted—it requires specific conditions, and there are only three confirmed, scientifically proven ways that HIV can be passed from one person to another.

The first and most common route is sexual transmission. This occurs when there is unprotected vaginal, anal, or oral sex with an HIV-positive person. HIV is present in semen, vaginal fluids, and rectal fluids, and these fluids can enter the body through mucous membranes or small breaks in the skin during sexual contact. Using condoms or other barrier methods consistently and correctly can almost eliminate this risk.

Continue reading

If both partners tested negative on rapid HIV antibody tests before having sex, is there still a risk of HIV infection without protection?

If both you and your partner tested negative on rapid HIV antibody tests before sexual activity, you may wonder if unprotected sex is completely safe.

The answer is: there is still a small possible risk, because no test can detect HIV during the window period—the time shortly after infection when the virus is present but not yet detectable by tests.

Low risk does not mean zero risk. Protection is always recommended.

But if both partners have waited long enough to fully pass the window period and both test results are negative, you can be confident that HIV is not present.

To put it simply:

Friction cannot create HIV. The virus only comes from an already infected person.