Hpv vaccine
VXRT
2025.01.05 08:36 iamricks_0110 [M4F] Sunday outs!
Meron pa ba dito naghahanap ng exclusive set up lang. Looking ako for exclusive fubu setup. Yung chill vibes and masarap kausap after sex haha. No string attached. Guaranteed!
About me. : Chinito, average built 5'8 matangos ilong confident naman ako sa looks ko hehe. Decent Clean 100% HPV Vaccinated - Hygienic and masunurin haha.
Lets echange pic sa TG. Im free din now, January 5, 2025 May car naman so madadaanan kita somewhere to pick you up .
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2025.01.07 18:39 Vivid-Opportunity536 HPV Protection and Conception: Vaccinated Partner’s Risk?
If one partner in a marriage is infected with an HPV strain that causes genital warts, and the other partner is fully vaccinated with Gardasil 9 (all three doses) and has no history of HPV infection, would the vaccinated partner be protected from the strain the infected partner has if they were to have unprotected sex while trying to conceive a baby?
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2025.01.07 21:37 JoJoMart518 Please help ease my nerves
I had anal sex 3 months ago using a condom but it was with 2 new partners. I asked about both of their STD status and they showed me that they were all negative. A couple weeks later I noticed 2 skin like pimples next to each other a little lower to the crack of my butt. I got tested for STDs and all came back negative, but I didn't test for herpes. These pimples have stayed the same for the last 3 months. Since I'm hairy I am assuming they are just in grown hairs from the friction from the condoms and dicks.
It doesn't look like herpes, but it may be HPV. Which doesn't make sense to me since I used condoms and had the vaccine as a kid.
I have a doc appointment to get it evaluated but really hoping for some advice and essentially get my nerves eased until then. Does this sound like HPV to you? A skin tag? Or something else? How much of a deal breaker is it to future partners if you have HPV? Will my dating life be over? I've never had a relationship and don't want this to be yet another barrier.
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2025.01.04 20:44 Powerful-Cucumber-78 Struggling with High-Risk HPV Diagnosis Despite Vaccination and a Careful Lifestyle
Hi everyone,
I’m writing this because I’m struggling to process a recent high-risk HPV type 59 diagnosis. I’ve been fully vaccinated against HPV since I was 14 and didn’t even become sexually active until I was 21. Now at 29, I’ve received this news, and even though I know as a doctor that it’s manageable, I can’t shake this overwhelming sense of shame and disappointment in myself.
I’ve always lived carefully—never promiscuous, always mindful of my health, and deeply committed to my faith in Christ. Yet, here I am, battling feelings of worthlessness. The last person I dated, also a doctor, ended things because he felt I wasn’t religious enough. Ironically, my faith is one of the most precious parts of who I am.
I’ve struggled to find a good partner and have always dreamed of having children. Now I can’t help but feel like my dreams are slipping away. An ex once cruelly told me I’d “expire” at 30, and with my 30th birthday approaching in March, I can’t stop crying, wondering if that prophecy is somehow coming true.
Even though HPV is so common and often clears, I’m consumed with fears about dormancy, transmission, and how to disclose this to a future partner. My conscience would never allow me not to disclose, but I’m terrified it will make me undesirable or unworthy of love.
I live alone in this country, and while I’ve battled and overcome depression in the past, these thoughts are starting to creep back in. I’ve even found myself wondering if life is worth living, though I know deep down that it is.
I feel so helpless and hate myself right now. If anyone has advice, words of comfort, or has gone through something similar, I would be grateful to hear from you. I don’t know how to keep my head above water right now.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
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2025.01.07 14:58 kwentongskyblue Flu, pneumonia, & HPV vaccines for free at SM City Davao from January 9 to 12
2025.01.07 00:09 AbleKaleidoscope877 Panicking about oropharynx cancer related to HPV
I am an RN and was recently talking to a doctor about the significant rise in oropharynx cancer in men related to HPV. I have been having pretty significant health anxiety lately and am too afraid to read much about it, so I apologize if this is a stupid concern.
I am a 32-year-old heterosexual male. My concern is that I had HPV with warts on my penis as a teenager (17ish) after having unprotected sex. They went away after about 2 years give or take. There hasn't been an issue since. I have also had plantar warts years ago that seem to have gone away, but I think I can still feel them underneath the skin, they just don't cause pain anymore.
My question is, how worried do I need to be about this? This
article says it is most commonly spread through oral sex or kissing...but I didn't perform oral sex on the person I most likely got HPV from, and haven't had any issues with sores in my mouth that I am aware of...I can't remember if I have even had cold sores? Should I be more concerned about penile cancer or something? Would getting the HPV vaccine at 32 be beneficial, and are there any preventative measures I can take to detect either oropharynx or penile cancer early if I am at risk? I have lost a large portion of my family to cancer and watched my grandpa die from esophageal cancer...I am kind of freaking out and even left work early that day after having a panic attack & went to a walk in to get my mouth looked at. For what it's worth, I have an appointment with a psychiatrist in 2 weeks due to worsening anxiety that I can no longer manage myself.
Thanks for any help!
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2025.01.07 02:03 Known_Confection5492 Anal Pap query
Dear bros, I got a call back today from the nurse at the PrEP/sti-testing clinic I go to. All clear but the pap came back positive for hpv and they want to recommend I get a colonoscopy now. She said there weren’t worrisome cells(?) present it’s just out of an an abundance of caution due to the positive result. I tried to keep cool and totally didn’t ask her many questions. I’m vaccinated for hpv but only as of the past year or so & am 40 now. Feeling tempted to be very concerned but also trying to stay rooted in the present where I’m feelin just fine. Anyways have any of you had any experience with an anal pap that led to a colonoscopy? Or have any advice you’d offer from a similar experience? Thanks!
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2025.01.06 23:41 queerpolyambeing Hopeful Perspectives
Hello all,
We constantly see negative vitriol on this page regarding acquiring herpes. I thought maybe as someone who has had both forms of herpes for several years now, that I can provide some hopeful advice and new perspectives.
- I don’t know how else to tell you this, but your life is not over. 80-90% of people on earth have a form of herpes. Most people on earth right now who don’t have herpes, will get at least one form of it by the time they are 50. The WHO just released data saying that 1/5 people globally have genital herpes (either strain). This is how common it is. Why are you freaking out about a virus that most people on earth already have or will get?
- Herpes, for the vast majority of the time, will not cause death or extreme health consequences. I find it interesting that people will freak out about herpes, but not HPV (which literally causes cancer) or Covid (which can leave you severely disabled, immunocompromised, or dead). Many men or people with penises do not receive the HPV vaccine to prevent spreading cancerous HPV to their partners. Any man or person with a penis who is not vaccinated for HPV, is absolutely much more of a risk to you than you are to them if you have herpes.
- One of the most common narratives I see regarding herpes is that it is incurable. And I think my question back to you is: so what? Like I said before, herpes will not cause death or any severe health complications for the vast majority of people. And sense 90% of people with herpes according to data are asymptomatic, this means that all the asymptomatic people around the world are living their lives just fine. They are not living their lives any different, so why should you? It is in fact, mostly asymptomatic people who are actually spreading the virus onto other people.
- People who know and disclose their status are scientifically proven to be safer people to sleep with, and are less likely to transmit herpes.
- If you know you have herpes and you are doing everything in your power to prevent further transmission, it is not your fault if it does eventually get transmitted to someone else. And in these cases, we should not say “I gave someone herpes”. You didn’t, the virus did. If any of us actually had a say in when herpes was transmitted, obviously, we would never let it happen. Language is very important, and this is language within the community that needs to be worked on and changed.
- There is no “better form” of herpes and I would encourage everyone to stop acting like there is. Both forms of herpes can infect you anywhere on the body, and both strains are more similar than they are not. I often see a lot of unnecessary stigma and nonsensical hierarchy surrounding HSV2, because it is the less common strain. Why wouldn’t the strain that is way more common (HSV1) and can infect you both orally and genitally not be more stigmatized? In fact, HSV1 is now responsible for more genital herpes infections than HSV2 is. Please make it make sense.
- Society has already normalized cold sores, which are herpes. HERPES! So why can’t we do this for genital herpes too? If oral herpes can be considered cold sores and “not a big deal”, then why can’t genital herpes too? Herpes is herpes is herpes regardless of type or location. I sincerely doubt that any sort of mass push for vaccines or cures will do anything to help the wild stigma of herpes. I’m not saying I don’t potentially want these things, vaccines or cures, but I’m not sure how reducing stigma is directly related to that. Through education and showing how common and normal herpes is, can really help us normalize it and create better health outcomes for people with herpes who are aware of their status.
- I have come to the conclusion that no matter what helpful facts exists surrounding herpes, that people will always use these facts to try and maintain sex negativity, shame people for having sex, and shame people for getting herpes while having sex. Because that is what others do to people with known herpes status, shame them for having sex, meanwhile, that person shaming you most likely also has a form of herpes and is doing the exact same thing that made you get herpes. These people are literally fucking or making some sort of physical contact with other humans and then pointing the finger at you to shame you, while they’re doing the same thing and taking the exact same risk, and all while they probably have herpes too.
- You can absolutely still have children with any form of herpes safely. You can start a family with any form of herpes safely.
- Rejection will happen, as it happens to us all regardless of herpes status. what I would encourage you to do is change your perspectives about these interactions because the people rejecting you for having herpes most likely already has at least 1 form of herpes, has slept with other people with herpes without knowing it, and are still taking the same risk with other people all the time. You are no more of a risk to them than literally any other person (once again, 90% of people with herpes are asymptomatic, and 80-90% of people on earth have herpes. This means that literally anyone that anyone else sleeps with will most likely have a form of herpes. Herpes is inevitable for the vast majority of us, and it’s mostly asymptomatic people that pass on the virus). Rejection from people like this is more of a comment on their lack of education and clear participation in willful ignorance, and not you. It may be hard to separate that at first, but it will become easier with time. To be honest, anyone who rejects me for having herpes is laughable at this point given all the data. With that being said, of course we can all decline to have sex with anyone for literally any reason. This is true. But it is also true that most people who reject people who disclose their herpes status is because they are uneducated, and the only knowledge they are operating with is stigma, shame, fear, and misinformation. It is also true that these people who reject you will sleep with other people who have herpes anyways, in absolute ignorant bliss, because it’s that common and they most often refuse to educate themselves. They probably have it too and if they don’t, they will eventually. Many people will choose extreme mental gymnastics and cognitive dissonance to deny that they probably have herpes, and state that since they don’t sleep with people with herpes (LOL) that they can’t have it. The math isn’t mathing.
- I use my herpes disclosure as a filtration system, to weed out assholes, along with uneducated and ignorant people. This has helped me avoid a lot of bad people and people who are incompatible with me. I personally don’t want to be involved with anyone who is going to shame/judge/stigmatize ppl for having a virus most people on earth already have, including them. If you think about a herpes disclosure from this perspective, it becomes easier because this approach centres your well being and needs. Additionally, why would you want to be with someone who is wildly uneducated about sexual health, and stigmatizes others?
- EVERYONE has an STI status to share, regardless of if it is negative or positive (keep in mind, most people don’t know their full STI status because we aren’t tested for HPV or herpes in regular STI screenings. People with penises also can’t be tested for HPV). So when or even before you disclose, ask the other person about their sexual history, when they’ve last been tested, their sexual health practices, etc. you are just as owed this information, and you are not the only one who is a potential risk in this scenario. All people who fuck other people are a risk, everyone in every sexual scenario is a risk (STI’s, unwanted pregnancy). There is no such thing as safe sex, only safer sex. We can take all the safety precautions and still get herpes. So please know you can do everything absolutely right and still get it.
- You are still the same person. The 90% of asymptomatic people with herpes don’t act or feel any differently yet have the same virus as you. You are not tainted, or dirty, or different. You are in fact quite normal and beautiful.
- There will be and are gorgeous, intelligent, and kind people out there who will be educated and absolutely give no fucks about your herpes status. They will know that they probably have it anyways or will eventually get it and know that they take the same risk with everyone else they sleep with too. I promise you that.
- The only way to avoid getting herpes would be to never touch another human being skin to skin ever again. I’d really like you to think about that for a moment. Which is worse: never being touched by another human being (not even a hug, a pat on the back, a handshake, let alone kissing or sex) or getting herpes, which is asymptomatic for 90% of people, barely causes death or extreme health consequences, and is a part of the human experience for the vast majority of people
I would encourage you all the check out this very helpful, funny, and insightful link. New Zealand is trying to be the best place in the world to have herpes and I think it’s awesome:
https://thebestplaceintheworldtohaveherpes.com/ Much love friends, and I promise, it will get better. ❤️🩹
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