A man handed me a napkin. I took my nasal mucus, the paper stuck to my lips, and I had a wound on her lips. I noticed that she had broken skin on her finger, and there was also secretion of humoral fluid. Would she be infected with AIDS?
Condition Analysis:
If you take a napkin and wipe your mouth, but you have a wound on your mouth, and you can see that the other person's hands are damaged and secreted, it depends on whether the other person has AIDS. If the other person has AIDS, there may be HIV in his body fluid, but if there is no large amount of live HIV on paper, because the napkin is dry, if the body fluid is dry immediately, the virus should also die.
Condition Analysis:
The first thing you need to know is that AIDS is not transmitted through sex. The second thing is that you need to know that AIDS is not transmitted through sex
Condition Analysis:
Hello, the main routes of transmission of AIDS are sexually transmitted, blood borne, like a napkin that you described, with a wound on your mouth, and the person who handed it to you with a broken skin and secreted body fluid. In principle, if the contact between body fluid and blood in the wound is likely to infect AIDS, the premise is to give you a napkin, this person himself has AIDS, as you describe the probability. There are few opportunities for HIV infection, almost negligible, and not too much to worry about.