Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

no pentration. condom get in touch with vaginal fluid.HIV?

2 days ago, met with CSW. There was no penetrative vaginal, oral  sex. I was wearing all time jokey sports boxer short.I was only dry thrumping her wearing shorts. After 10 minutes asked her for condom for protected hand job. The South korean lady understood this as for vaginal sex and applied some ky gelly in  her vagina and then opened a condom for me and was holding it to put on my penis.the time difference would be seconds.
After that I had protected hand job only wearing the boxer shorts. My question is that whether I am at risk of HIB and other STDs as some vaginal fluid might get contact with the condom and with my penis n urethra? I am circumcised male. Please help me with your expert advice. Can I continue with life  without much thinking about the risk of the incident.....
1 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
None of your activities is a risk for hiv. You had no risk and don't need to test. For hiv to be transmitted sexually, you got to have had unprotected anal/vaginal penetration. Nothing else is.
Helpful - 0
2 Comments
Thank you so much for reply. But does your reply change as I am taking tetracyclin antibiotics for ureaplasma pavam. My only concern is that if the vaginal fluid that might be in condom do reaches to penis urethra and mixes with those uraplasma. really please advice....I dint have any penetrative sex.
No it won't change.
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the HIV Prevention Community

Top HIV Answerers
366749 tn?1544695265
Karachi, Pakistan
370181 tn?1595629445
Arlington, WA
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Condoms are the most effective way to prevent HIV and STDs.
PrEP is used by people with high risk to prevent HIV infection.
Can I get HIV from surfaces, like toilet seats?
Can you get HIV from casual contact, like hugging?
Frequency of HIV testing depends on your risk.
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) may help prevent HIV infection.