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Illustration by Liz Defrain
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Playing the HIV numbers game is less—and more—risky than you think.
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Can you get HIV from oral sex? That's probably one of the most common
questions AIDS service providers and doctors get asked. Americans really
want to know their HIV risk during fellatio—even more so than during
anal sex. Sure, you can Google the subject, but the results may further
confuse and scare you.
A Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) fact sheet describes the probability of oral sex
transmission as “low.” But what does that mean? The AIDS.gov website
puts it this way: “You can get HIV by performing oral sex on your male
partner, although the risk is not as great as it is with unprotected
anal or vaginal sex.” Regarding going down on a woman, the site
explains: “HIV has been found in vaginal secretions, so there is a risk
of contracting HIV from this activity.”
Does this put your mind
at ease? Hardly. That's why many of us seek out percentages and ratios
when we talk about risk. Numbers seem less abstract, more specific. But
do they give us a better understanding of HIV risk and sexual health?
Let's do the math.
Probabilities of HIV transmission per exposure
to the virus are usually expressed in percentages or as odds (see chart
at the end of this article). For example, the average risk of
contracting HIV through sharing a needle one time with an HIV-positive
drug user is 0.67 percent, which can also be stated as 1 in 149 or,
using the ratios the CDC prefers, 67 out of 10,000 exposures. The risk
from giving a blowjob to an HIV-positive man not on treatment is at most
1 in 2,500 (or 0.04 percent per act). The risk of contracting HIV
during vaginal penetration, for a woman in the United States, is 1 per
1,250 exposures (or 0.08 percent); for the man in that scenario, it's 1
per 2,500 exposures (0.04 percent, which is the same as performing
fellatio).
As for anal sex, the most risky sex act in terms of
HIV transmission, if an HIV-negative top—the insertive partner—and an
HIV-positive bottom have unprotected sex, the chances of the top
contracting the virus from a single encounter are 1 in 909 (or 0.11
percent) if he's circumcised and 1 in 161 (or 0.62 percent) if he's
uncircumcised. And if an HIV-negative person bottoms for an HIV-positive
top who doesn't use any protection but does ejaculate inside, the
chances of HIV transmission are, on average, less than 2 percent.
Specifically, it is 1.43 percent, or 1 out of 70. If the guy pulls out
before ejaculation, then the odds are 1 out of 154.
Say what? Is
HIV really this hard to transmit, especially in light of the alarming
statistics we are bombarded with? Although the CDC estimates that nearly
1.1 million Americans are living with HIV and that the rate of new
infections remains stable at about 50,000 per year, there has been a 12
percent increase between 2008 and 2010 among men who have sex with men
(MSM)—including a 22 percent jump among young MSM ages 13 to 24.
A
report by the Black AIDS Institute states that African-American
same-gender-loving men have a 25 percent chance (which is one in four
odds) of contracting HIV by the time they're 25 years old—and a 60
percent chance by the time they're 40. Other researchers have predicted
that half of all gay men in America who are 22 years old today will be
HIV positive by the time they're 50.
So how do we go from the
odds being 1 out of 70 that HIV will be transmitted during the most
risky sex act to the odds being 1 out of 2 that young gay men in the
United States will contract HIV before they're 50? (And before you even
think it: No, the answer is not that everyone with HIV is a ginormous
slut who has never heard of safer sex.)
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Liz Defrain |
For starters, you have to understand that these probabilities of HIV
transmission per single exposure are averages. They are general ballpark
figures that do not reflect the many factors that can raise and lower
risk.
One such factor is acute infection, the period of six to
12 weeks after contracting the virus. At this time, viral load
skyrockets, increasing a person's infectiousness by as much as 26 times
(the same thing as saying “26-fold”). So right there, the per-act risk
of receptive vaginal transmission jumps from 1 out of 1,250 exposures to
1 out of 50 exposures, and the risk of receptive anal sex goes from 1
out of 70 to higher than 1 out of 3. It's also important to realize that
during acute infection, the immune system has not yet created the
antibodies that lower viral load, at least for a few years. HIV tests
that rely on antibodies may give a false negative reading during an
acute infection, also known as the “window period.”
The presence
of another sexually transmitted infection (STI)—even one without
symptoms, such as gonorrhea in the throat or rectum—can raise HIV risk
as much as 8 times, in part because STIs increase inflammation and thus
the number of white blood cells that HIV targets. Vaginal conditions
such as bacterial vaginosis, dryness and menstruation also alter risk.
"There’s not a lot of certainty in these numbers. But they can be a good tool for understanding risk."
Other
factors lower risk. Circumcision does so an average of 60 percent for
heterosexual men. HIV-positive people who have an undetectable viral
load thanks to their meds can reduce transmission risk by 96 percent, a
concept known as “treatment as prevention.” Early results from the
ongoing PARTNER study (to be completed in 2017) found zero transmissions
among both straight and gay serodiscordant couples when the positive
partner was on successful treatment, even if STIs were present.
HIV-negative people can take a daily Truvada pill as pre-exposure
prophylaxis, or PrEP, to lower their risk by 92 percent; similarly,
there is post-exposure prophylaxis, or PEP. And the CDC says condoms
lower risk about 80 percent. Of course, these numbers will vary based on
correct and consistent use of the prevention strategy.
Researchers
also view risk through the constructs of family, relationships,
community and socioeconomic status. A quick example: According to CDC
data, 84 percent of HIV-positive women contract the virus through
heterosexual contact. As researchers including Judith Auerbach, PhD, an
adjunct professor at the University of California, San Francisco point
out, the phrase “heterosexual contact” masks the prevalence of anal sex
among straight couples and the role of sexual violence—which can be
significant because exposure to gender inequality and intimate partner
violence triples a woman's risk for STIs and increases her chance of
getting HIV 1.5 times.
Then there is the concept of cumulative
risk. The oft-cited numbers for the risk of HIV transmission take into
account one instance of exposure. But this is not a static number. Risk
accumulates through repeated exposures, though you can't simply add up
the probabilities of each exposure to score your total risk.
Statisticians, in case you're curious, do have a formula for cumulative
risk: 1 - ( ( 1 - x ) ^ y ) in which x is the risk per exposure (as a
decimal) and y is the number of exposures.
(continued below)
"During sex, our risk perception is replaced by love, lust, trust and intimacy."
When
you lack information or misunderstand facts, you can't grasp your true
HIV risk. If you underestimate the HIV prevalence in your community,
you'll underestimate your risk. Surveys have found that more than one in
five gay men in urban cities are HIV positive, and the virus is more
prevalent among MSM of color and certain communities. People in these
communities are more likely to come in contact with the virus even if
they have fewer partners and practice safer sex more often. In other
words, everyone's HIV risk is not the same.
Perhaps the biggest
miscalculation is the incorrect assessment that you or your partner is
HIV negative. That's why risk-reduction strategies like serosorting
(having sex without condoms only with people of your same status) have a
larger margin of error.
Perry Halkitis, PhD, a New York
University researcher who has followed cohorts of young MSM and older
HIV-positive people, has observed that people make assumptions such as:
“He's older and from the city, so he's more likely to be positive and I
won't sleep with him. But a young guy from the Midwest who looks
negative? Sure, let's do everything!”
“People are making
decisions based on their assessment about the person, and it needs to be
much more focused on the act,” says Halkitis, who also believes basic
HIV education must go into the nuances of transmission. He wonders who
is teaching young people not to use Vaseline with condoms, for example,
or not to douche right before sex (if you must, do it a few hours
earlier) or, if you're shooting drugs, not to share the water and works,
which can also spread the virus.
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Liz Defrain |
Data be damned. All the numbers in the world won't change the fact that
people are terrible at gauging their HIV risk. Often for good reason. If
you're struggling to find a job, a meal or a place to live, HIV is not
high on your list of concerns, even if exposure to more risk in your
daily life raises your risk for the virus. If you're falling in love or
dating, you don't view your partner as an HIV threat, despite the fact
that as much as two-thirds of HIV today is spread through relationships.
Even
in hook-ups, people aren't likely tabulating their HIV risk. One survey
asked young MSM who cruised for sex online to list their main worries.
The answers? That the person they met wouldn't look like their profile,
or that they'd be rejected by the person—or be robbed or beaten or
raped. HIV wasn't the top concern.
This isn't because the young
men were ignorant about the virus, says Columbia University's Alex
Carballo-Dieguez, PhD, one of the authors of that study, along with
numerous additional MSM and HIV research. “In the interview room,
sitting in front of me, most gay men have heightened risk perception and
can accurately recite all the circumstances that may result in HIV
transmission,” Carballo-Dieguez says. “But at the time of the sexual
encounter, when men are seeking the most satisfactory experience
possible, risk perception recedes and is replaced by love, trust,
intimacy, lust, kinkiness and many other condiments that improve the
flavor of sex. In [Blaise] Pascal's words, Le Coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connait point [The heart has its reasons that reason knows nothing of].”
“Our
experiences of sex are not about ‘Danger! Danger! Will Robinson!'” says
Jim Pickett, director of prevention advocacy and gay men's health at
the AIDS Foundation of Chicago. “Sex is about pleasure and intimacy and
things that make us feel good. And in the real world, risk-takers are
celebrated. We have to take risks every day.” A better approach, he
says, is not to ask, “What's my risk for HIV?” but instead to think,
“What can I do to enjoy the sex that I want to have but remain free of
diseases?”
Len Tooley, a colleague of Wilton's at CATIE who
also does HIV testing, agrees. Sexual health is often framed in the idea
of risk instead of rewards. This may present HIV and those living with
it as the worst possible outcome imaginable, he notes, which is not only
stigmatizing but often irrational and false since many people with HIV
are, in fact, just fine.
“When we get embroiled in concepts of
risk, it's easy to go down the rabbit hole,” Tooley says. “When people
ask for numbers, they're usually trying to find a balance between what
they want to do sexually and the chances that those activities would
lead to HIV transmission.” The ensuing discussions, he says, bring up
questions about morals and values around HIV transmission, about how
much risk we think is worth taking, how we perceive HIV as a possible
result of our actions, and when it's OK to ditch condoms. Questions, in
other words, that can't be answered with a simple number.
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