What are the chances of women who are HIV positive passing the virus to their ba!


Question: I want to see links and proof not ridicoulous statements like "the baby will get it and die or the moma will die. If you believe this prove it with links and facts.


Answers: I want to see links and proof not ridicoulous statements like "the baby will get it and die or the moma will die. If you believe this prove it with links and facts.

According to the CDC less than 2% of babies will contracting the virus from their mothers. The mother should take her meds during pregnancy and she will be given meds during childbirth and the baby will be given meds after birth to reduce the rate of transmission.fewer than 2 in 100 babies will be born with the virus.

Do the research yourself. Some babies a born HIV negative while lots of others are born to HIV mothers and they too are HIV positive.

The chances are small IF the mother takes the drugs she should take while pregnant, and IF the child is given certain drugs after birth. See: http://www.avert.org/motherchild.htm

50%. if your mate had it, them 100%

It's very true . Check it yourself by googling HIV pregnancy etc.

It is a very low chance because in utero the baby's blood does not mix with the mother's blood. When giving birth, thats when most babies get the virus because of the blood being mixed at that time. Also
A HIV pos mother should NOT breastfeed because the virus can be passed that way

100% don't have time to look up a link

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If she is taking her meds the chances of transmitting HIV to the baby are very low.

Read this:
http://www.avert.org/pregnancy.htm

Try this link

Very big chance.
But if the woman knows that she is HIV +ve early enough she can take medications to protect the baby and although they are still under trail but they gave good results.

You can reduce the risk of passing it through some treatments... go to the link, it seems helpful. Click on the link that says "Rapid Testing to Prevent Mother-to-Child Transmission."

depends on the type of delivery, and where the woman lives.
If she lives in the US or another developed country , the risk can be as low as 10-15%. Here, the latest medication are available, and most hospitals have laser scalpers.
If she takes medications while she's pregnant and undergoes the new "blood free" C-section, it's almost risk-free. (I think they use a special laser that eliminates any trace of blood as it cuts, but I'm not sure).
If she lives in Sub-Saharan Africa, is malnourished, doesn't take medication,delivers the baby naturally, and has to breastfeed, the chances go up to 80-90%.

They have medicine for that now. Your baby will not contracted it.

you get it your not born with it duhhhhhhhhhhhhh





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