A second example, also from the world of
sports: On November 7, 199 1, Earvin 'Magic'
Johnson gave up his brilliant basketball career.
The reason: the Laker star was infected with
HIV and did not want to knowingly infect his
fellow players. The question is, how big was the
danger of infection really? HIV can only be
transmitted through unsafe sex (without the use
of condoms) and direct blood contact. Since this
incredibly tall basketball player only shared the
field (but not his bed) with his fellow basketball
players, the virus could only be transmitted
through direct blood contact. Through small
wounds, or mouth, nose and eyes, blood particles
of one person might get into the bloodstream of
another person. However, this possibility is very
small. However, Johnson did not want to take
any risks and left the game. The third and last
example: In 1997, a judge in the Netherlands sentenced an HIV
positive woman to 24 months in jail, 8 of which
were probation. When caught shoplifting, she
had bitten a security guard. Attempted
manslaughter was considered not proven, since
experts put forward that the chance of
transmitting HIV through a bite was
approximately one in a billion. Just as with
Johnson's fellow basketball players, the
physician who treated Louganis, and the Dutch
security man, there is a certain chance that you,
as prison guard, might catch an infectious disease
while at work. But here too, the question is: How
big is this risk really?
A risk analysis
In general one could say: The more serious the
illness, the less the risk of infection. The same
applies vice versa: The greater the risk of
infection, the less serious the illness. Hepatitis A
is relatively harmless but very contagious. Each
year, over 10 billion people world-wide are
infected with hepatitis A. The flu even has an
infection risk of 100%, but for most people, the
flu is harmless. So far, the initially expected
AIDS epidemic has not occurred, simply because the risks of infection are limited.
People do not get AIDS from talking to
someone, as can happen with the flu. You
cannot get AIDS from someone coughing in
your face, as happens with active tuberculosis.
You d not catch AIDS from infected water as
you do with hepatitis A. Sharing the same bed
with someone can result in getting scabies but
not AIDS. A mother who chews the food for
her baby can infect the baby with hepatitis B
but not with AIDS. A dirty toilet seat can give
yo a painful boil but cannot give you AIDS.
Okay, purely hypothetically, one could catch
AIDS in the street if a gust of wind blows
infected blood in one's eye but that possibility
is just as remote as the impact of a large
meteorite: Meteorites the size of a large
passenger ship hit earth on average once every
hundred thousand years.
This chapter deals with infectious diseases.
How do you get infected? How can infections
be prevented? And what are the symptoms if
someone is infected? The facts about
infections.