Can you be infected if you live with an AIDS patient?

Living with an AIDS patient, if you only come into contact with saliva, sweat, urine and other secretions, but not with blood, reproductive tract secretions, or breast milk, it will generally not lead to transmission. There are no reports of HIV transmission due to contact with these bodily fluids because the HIV content of sweat, urine and saliva is very small. If a person with AIDS has undergone antiviral treatment to reduce the amount of HIV to a very low level, the amount of HIV in the blood will be very low, and the amount of HIV in other body fluids will also be reduced. In this case, even if you come in contact with other body fluids, the possibility of transmission will be significantly reduced. Therefore, even if an AIDS patient does not undergo treatment, daily contact with an AIDS patient will not lead to transmission, and it is possible to have dinner with an AIDS patient or even a courtesy kiss. If the person with AIDS has undergone antiretroviral treatment and the amount of HIV is reduced to a very low level, it is also likely that transmission will not result through other means.