What to do

Get Tested!

HIV can be diagnosed by a simple blood test, which checks your blood for antibodies to HIV.

 

This means that you have HIV antibodies in your blood and are HIV positive. Being HIV positive means you will need to look at ways of taking particular care of your own health. It also means that you can pass on the virus to others. So:

  1. Always use a condom for vaginal, oral or anal sex.
  2. If you inject drugs, do not let other people use your equipment.
  3. Remember that you cannot pass on the virus through everyday social
    contact.
  4. Avoid sharing toothbrushes or shaving equipment.

There are treatments that can help delay the onset of AIDS and you can discuss whether or when to start these with your consultant. This decision is important as the effectiveness of the treatment Depends on starting it at the right time.

Signs and Symptoms

What to look out for

Some people may have no symptoms, but they can still pass on the virus.
Symptoms may include:

  1. Most people with HIV look and feel healthy for a long time, so you can't tell who has the virus just by looking at them.
  2. There is no available vaccine against HIV.
  3. There is still no cure for HIV although anti-retroviral drugs have been developed, which mean that some people can stay well for longer.
  4. These don't suit everybody.

Remember

You cannot get HIV through:

  1. Kissing, touching, hugging, shaking hands.
  2. Sharing crockery and cutlery.
  3. Coughing or sneezing.
  4. Contact with toilet seats.
  5. Insect or animal bites.
  6. Eating food prepared by someone with HIV.

HIV / AIDS

Virus

HIV stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus.

 

It can leads to AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome), which damages the body's defence system so that it cannot fight off certain infections.

 

Getting it

There are four main ways to get HIV:

  1. By having vaginal, anal or oral sex without a condom with someone who has HIV.
  2. By using needles, syringes or other drug injecting or tattooing equipment
    that is infected with HIV.
  3. From a woman with HIV to her baby (before or during birth) and by breastfeeding.
  4. By receiving infected blood, blood products or donated organs as part of medical treatment in a country where these are not tested. In the UK all blood, blood products and donated organs are tested for HIV.