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Can You Get Infected With HIV In a Sex Doll Experience?


Nowadays, the "sharing economy" has spread to the field of silicone dolls. The business of dressing up silicone sex dolls as real people to provide "sexual services" to customers is called "adult experience". The last two years, the "adult experience" business in some cities is getting hot, you may only need to spend a few dozen dollars, you can experience the sexual services provided by the silicone doll.

Whether There Are Health Risks

This "erotic" service may seem more secure and safe, but is it really? Other issues put aside, today we will talk about the health risks involved. Since sex is involved, the topic of HIV cannot be avoided. So, through this "adult experience" will not be infected with HIV? Some of the silicone love dolls in the experience hall are removable disposable lower body channel, customers can take away after use, relatively safe; but more are shared by multiple people. Silicone dolls are made for simulation, there will be some folds in the cavity, it is difficult to clean. And the disinfection of sexually transmitted disease virus requires professional medical disinfection means, including high temperature and medical disinfectant inactivation, silicone doll material does not have such disinfection conditions. From the point of view of health and hygiene, if the cleaning and disinfection is not in place, shared use does theoretically carry some risk, because HIV can survive in vitro. In liquid at room temperature (25°C) ~ 37°C, HIV can maintain its infectious activity for about 14 days; under room temperature conditions, it can survive for 24 hours on the surface of clothing, paper towels and other absorbent materials; and on the surface of smooth, non-absorbent materials (such as plastic and silicone), it can survive for more than 48 hours.

Conditions For The Presence Of HIV

It can be seen that HIV can easily survive in liquid state, but it is afraid of drying, so exposing contaminated items to sunlight or leaving them at room temperature for a long time to make them as dry as possible are effective ways to prevent HIV transmission. But in the "sharing" business model, this method is difficult to implement, so it seems that the fear of silicone dolls with living HIV is not overly concerned. However, we need to understand that the presence of living HIV does not mean that we will definitely be infected. HIV infection requires three major elements: 1) entry into the human body, such as skin wounds, mucosal wounds of the digestive tract, genital tract and rectal mucosa; 2) high-risk exchange of body fluids with HIV patients, such as semen, blood, etc.; 3) the virus in body fluids must reach a certain amount. The above three elements must be satisfied at the same time before an HIV-infected person can transmit the virus to others. If during unprotected intercourse, semen or vaginal secretion contains a high level of HIV (the virus in body fluids must reach a certain amount), the female vagina continuously secretes body fluids or the male semen stays in the vagina or rectum for a long time (high risk body fluid exchange with HIV patients), then HIV can enter the male body through the opening at the tip of the penis or through the mucous membrane between the vagina and the cervix This is when HIV can enter the female body through the opening at the tip of the penis, or through the mucous membrane between the vagina and cervix (the entrance to the body), and the chance of HIV infection is higher. Here again, the importance of wearing a condom has to be emphasized. However, you may also have the question: if a condom breaks during the use of a silicone doll, will it infect you with HIV? Theoretically, if there is semen from an HIV-infected person in the silicone doll and it is not exposed to air, and it is continued to be used by the next user within a short period of time, and it happens that the condom breaks and the genitals of the next user come into contact with the semen of the HIV-infected person, there is indeed a risk of infection in this case, but the probability of it happening is extremely low and almost impossible to happen in one incident. To date, there have been no known cases of HIV infection from sharing sex toys.

Some Common Questions

Here we will pick a few very representative questions to answer one by one.
1) Will you get HIV from sleeping in someone else's bed? No. HIV needs to invade the body through the blood or mucous membranes, so if you don't have any wounds lying in bed, it's impossible to get infected.
2) Will you get HIV by kissing the lips or breasts of a silicone doll in the experience hall? Some components in saliva can inhibit the activity of HIV, and there is a very thick layer of epithelial cells in the mouth, so it is difficult for HIV to invade. If there is an open wound in the mouth, there is no need to worry because even if the silicone doll is contaminated with HIV, it will quickly deactivate in a dry air environment.
3) Will I get HIV if I touch someone's bodily fluids if I have barbs on my hands? No. The wounds we are referring to are generally fresh, bleeding wounds. Wounds such as crusted wounds, peeling skin, and fissures actually have healed tissue surfaces and will not be infected by contact with each other's bodily fluids.
4) Can I get infected if I rub HIV-infected prostate fluid or semen on my clothes? Can I still wear my clothes after washing them with laundry detergent? No, you can still wear your clothes. The virus has not entered your body, so you will not get infected. The actual fact is that you can get a lot more than just a few of these.
5) Will I get HIV if I touch each other's prostate fluid on my hands and accidentally pick my gums after washing my hands with water for ten minutes? No. The determination of the viability of HIV infection in vitro is the result of 5-6 hours of action under laboratory conditions, and although the theoretical inference is that there is a risk of infection, no reports of infection through contamination with HIV body fluids or blood left outside the body have been found in real life, and the U.S. CDC also classifies HIV exposed to air as not having the ability to transmit. In this scenario, although the prostate fluid contains more HIV, the vast majority of it has been rinsed away after washing with water, and your hands are dry after ten minutes, at which point HIV almost loses its ability to infect, and when the gums bleed, the contact time between your hands and the bleeding location is very short, so no infection occurs.

Although it is almost impossible to contract HIV through shared use of silicone dolls, it is possible to contract other sexually transmitted diseases such as syphilis and condyloma acuminata. Therefore, from the health and hygiene point of view, we recommend choosing a compliant and legally operated place to consume and take protective measures.