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Blood in eye during surgery 7 weeks negative

Hi!
During a flush in a surgery I got some splash of blood/fluid on my eye. Is this a HIV risk?
I also did a 7 week antibody test which was negative, can I trust this test to be conclusive?

Wasn’t really worried before but after the negative test I had unprotected sex with my boyfriend and a few weeks later he is having some symptoms like fever, rash..
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Avatar universal
You had no HIV risk but you s/b able to double check by asking about your hospital's protocol without listing your experience.
HIV is instantly inactivated in air and also in saliva which means it is effectively dead so it can't infect from touching, external rubbing or oral activities. It doesn't matter if you and they were actively bleeding or had cuts at the time either because the HIV is effectively dead.

Only adult risks are the following:
1. unprotected penetrating vaginal
2. unprotected penetrating anal sex
3. sharing needles that you inject with. Knowing these 3 are all you need to know to protect yourself against HIV. Your situation is a long way from any of these 3.
Even with blood, lactation, cuts, rashes, burns, etc the air or the saliva does not allow inactivated virus to infect from touching, external rubbing or oral activities. The above HIV science is 40 years old and very well established so there is no detail that you can add that will make any of your encounter a risk for HIV.  No one in 40 years of HIV history got HIV from the situation you are concerned about so it is unlikely that it will happen in the next 40 of your lifetime either.
A 4th gen duo test is conclusive after 4 weeks, but unnecessary in your case. Not surprising he got a fever, as I had a few myself this winter.
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