Breastfeeding HIV infection x
Scientific studies indicate that the risk of a child becoming contaminated by HIV when her mother is a carrier of the virus increases by 14.4 percentage points when direct breastfeeding occurs.
The risk of HIV infection from mother to child during pregnancy and childbirth ranges from 13% in European countries to 25% in developing countries. https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/forums/range/read.php?9,27633
With breastfeeding, these risks would jump to 27.4% in Europe and 39.9% in some African countries.
The program of the United Nations AIDS (UNAIDS) recommends breastfeeding in populations where the risk of malnutrition is much higher than the risk of HIV infection due to socio-economic conditions.
In Brazil, the recommendation is to pasteurize milk, avoiding direct feeding process, since it becomes impossible to accept the possibility of breastfeeding women infected with HIV, regardless of the reason for this purpose. http://uchem.berkeley.edu/forum/read.php?26,678959
The National AIDS Commission considers that the Government should ensure access to food substitutes to mothers who only possess the milk itself as a survival factor for your child.
Reddish spots in the body
The time for one positive experience symptoms varies widely: there is no set deadline. Most spend more than ten years without anything and some may never develop AIDS, despite being infected with HIV. http://blog.uaa.edu.py/amylopez105/2014/01/04/how-aspartame-can-cause-very-serious-problems-2/
RISK FACTORS
Sex without condoms (through contact with contaminated semen and vaginal secretions);

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