true but also HIV can not be stopped by a condom. It can help to prevent the spread. But it can not stop it. I always thought it was gov. BS, just like weed leads to hard drugs and addiction. So looked up the studies myself and found it true about condoms not stopping the virus. That was one of the things that scared me away for years. But in Brazil the systems they used to keep people clean got me to get over that.
Originally Posted by Ziel
Maybe you should read this again.
http://www.thebody.com/Forums/AIDS/S...t/Q193064.html
I got into the hobby working overseas out of brazil for two years. Over there the providers would get themselves tested once a month for anything if they were working at a good club. The club would force the testing and keep track if anyone was tested pos. they were given treatment and time off or let go if no treatment could be given for what they got.
Originally Posted by Ziel
Two things. One, who in the fuck is checking the customers and/or boyfriends (husbands s/o's)? Fact, the receptive partner has a greater chance of getting HIV, so in a nutshell the little garota who is working the termas is about a 2/1 risk over the customer or getting HIV. Number 2 fact is that (as I mentioned before) is that HIV shows up on a blood test 3-6 months after the exposure. So the little garota who is not showing up HIV+ on the blood test may in fact be spreading the virus.
http://www.slumdance.com/blogs/brian...es/000873.html
From this link....
"And now the young woman, Lara Roxx (aka Laura Roxx, Lana Roxx and Lara Coxx), who began her career in porn three months ago, has HIV. (See
Adult Video News story--graphics on site not safe for work.)
She got it from fellow performer Darren James. The porn industry has its own scheme of HIV testing and reporting, but it is far from perfect. HIV tests lag behind the bug itself by as many as 60 days. A porn performer can have a lot of high-risk sex in 60 days--with people who also have a whole lot of sex.
An industry doctor estimates Darren James was infected on March 10 on a trip to Brazil. Back in L.A., James had a routine HIV test on March 17--but it didn't detect the infection. Then he worked. Twelve porn actresses, now "voluntarily quarantined" according to AVN, are on the "first generation" list, meaning James penetrated them without protection. Lara Roxx is one of those twelve. None of the others have tested positive--yet. They won't know for sure until June. The second generation, who had sex with one of the twelve in the first generation, is also voluntarily quarantined. (The Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation has a quarantine list. I offer no link because the overwhelmed A.I.M. has requested not to receive calls or website visits from civilians "so adult entertainers can get through and get accurate information." If that's you, just enter "Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation" in a search engine to get there.)
AVN has recommended a
moratorium (site nsfw) on production, and some companies may comply. But none has to. There aren't any regulations that say so, just as there weren't any regulations to prevent Lara Roxx from being infected with HIV as part of her workplace duties. There is nobody (with legal authority, at least) even to say to the industry, "You
idiots. Start using
condoms at the very least."
You thoughts don't hold much water, the nicest thing I can say is that you are naive. Maybe you should study this.
http://www.thebody.com/Forums/AIDS/S...ual/index.html