Can you get AIDS from squeezing and rubbing a bleeding wound?

If a healthy person bleeds and the wound comes into contact with the blood, etc. of an AIDS patient by squeezing and rubbing, there is a higher risk of infection. If the wound does not come into contact with the blood of an AIDS patient, it will not be infected.
There are three main ways of spreading AIDS: sexual contact, blood transmission, and vertical transmission from mother to child.
Sexual contact refers to unprotected sex between people of the same sex or the opposite sex; mother-to-child vertical transmission refers to female AIDS patients, who can transmit the virus to their fetuses or infants through pregnancy, childbirth and breastfeeding; direct contact with blood includes the transmission of blood and blood products, such as transfusion of HIV-contaminated whole blood cells, plasma and other blood products.
If a healthy person bleeds and the wound squeezes and rubs against body fluids such as blood or semen from a person with AIDS, there is a higher risk of contracting the infection. If the wound does not come into contact with the blood of an AIDS patient, etc., it will not be infected.
In addition, the saliva, tears, sweat and other secretions or urine, feces and other excretions of AIDS patients basically do not contain HIV, and contact with these body fluids will not lead to infection.
If you are suspected of being infected with HIV, it is recommended that you consult a doctor for a definitive diagnosis.