This thread is OVER. The window period is IRRELEVANT because the chance that your partner is in the window period is effectively ZERO.
----------------------------------THREAD CLOSED----------------------------------
ADDITIONAL POSTS WILL BE DELETED
--------------------------THIS THREAD IS OVER------------------------------
So is it during the window period when the person tests negative on a HIV test or when a person tests positive
The first few weeks after infection. But that is irrelevant.
Last thing. When is someone the most infectious to give hiv to there partner. Is it during the window period when the person tests negative? Thanks for taking your time. Thank you A lot.
Okay, here is a breakdown of your risk:
1. Stripper was using condoms. Most likely this was because she is HIV negative and wants to protect herself from her customers.
2. In general, most strippers 99% don't have HIV. The likelihood that any stripper has HIV is no more than 1 in 100.
3. This stripper tested negative. This means that she would have had to have caught HIV in the past 4-6 weeks. The odds of that are probably 1 in a million.
4. The vast majority of exposures to HIV infected people do not result in infection. The average frequency of transmission has been estimated at 1 in 1000.
5. You were protected up to the point the condom broke.
When you combine all of this, the chance that you have HIV is vanishingly small. Your exposure barely registers as a risk. Test at 6 weeks and again at 3 months, but expect negative results.