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Can I get HIV from seeing the dentist or the doctor?

By Mark Cichocki, R.N., About.com

Created: June 11, 2006

About.com Health's Disease and Condition content is reviewed by the Medical Review Board

Question: Can I get HIV from seeing the dentist or the doctor?

People often ask if their doctor or dentist happens to be HIV positive, do they present a risk of transmitting the infection to their patients. The CDC answers that question.

Answer: Although HIV transmission is possible in health care settings, it is extremely rare. Medical experts emphasize that the careful practice of infection control procedures, including universal precautions, protects patients as well as health care providers from possible HIV infection in medical and dental offices.

In 1990, the CDC reported on an HIV-infected dentist in Florida who apparently infected some of his patients while doing dental work. Studies of viral DNA sequences linked the dentist to six of his patients who were also HIV-infected. The CDC has as yet been unable to establish how the transmission took place.

Despite this one isolated case, further studies of more than 22,000 patients of 63 health care providers who were HIV-infected have found no further evidence of transmission from provider to patient in health care settings. Simply put, don't avoid going to your doctor or your dentist for fear of getting HIV. And if you have concerns, share them with your health care providers at your next visit.

Source: Adapted from information provided by The Centers of Disease Control.

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