Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Sexual Transmitted diseases.
Cheaters, players, knockers, whatever you’re known as, remember it’s very easy to catch sexual Transmitted diseases including HIV. You can easily infect your partner, from the following listed down below. And some of you have already infected your loved ones with serious infections. The risk is very high to catch HIV it’s a known fact, you have been warned.
Health Protection Agency.
According to the Health Protection Agency, 66,000 people in the UK are living with HIV and a third of those are unaware of it.
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) overall are on the rise with the number of UK diagnoses standing at 790,387 for 2005. So if you’re with a new partner, use a condom until you have both been tested. But you can still catch crabs and herpes.
Sexual Transmitted diseases (STD) are transmitted through body contact during sex. They are caused by viruses, bacteria and parasites. They can also be known as sexual Transmitted Infections (STIS) or by their old name Venereal Diseases (VD).
There are at least 25 different sexual Transmitted diseases. What they all have in common is that they can be transmitted by sexual contact, including vagina, anal and oral sex.
Men and Women who cheat on their partners have known to have transmitted the following diseases:
- Crabs
- Genital Herpes
- Genital Warts
- Gonorrhoea
- Gut Infections
- Thrush
CRABS
Crabs, or Pubic Lice are small, crab shaped parasites that live on hair and which draw blood. They live predominantly on pubic hair, but can also be found in hair in the armpit, on the body and even in facial hair such as eyebrows. They can live away from the body too, and therefore can be found in clothes, bedding and towels. You can have crabs and not know about it, but after 2 to 3 weeks, you would expect to experience some itching. Crabs are mainly passed on through body contact during sex, but they can also be passed on through sharing clothes, towels or bedding with someone who has them. There is no effective way to prevent yourself becoming infected, though you can prevent others becoming infected by washing clothes and bedding on a hot wash. Lotions can be brought from pharmacies and applied to the body to kill off the parasites. Shaving off pubic hair will not necessarily get rid of crabs.
GENITAL HERPES

Genital Herpes is caused by the herpes simplex virus. The virus can affect the mouth, the genital area, the skin around the anus and the fingers. Once the first outbreak of herpes is over, the virus hides away in the nerve fibres, where it remains totally undetected and causes no symptoms.
Symptoms of the first infection usually appear one to 26 days after exposure and last two to three weeks. Both men and women may have one or more symptoms, including an itching or tingling sensation in the genital or anal area, small fluid filled blisters that can burst and leave small sores which can be very painful, pain when passes over any of the open sores and a flu-like illness, headache, swollen glands or fever.
GENITAL WARTS
Gential warts are small freshly growths which may appear anywhere on a man and woman’s genital area. They are caused by a virus called the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). Warts can grow on the genitals, or on different parts of the body, such as the hands. After you have been infected with the genital wart virus it usually takes between 1 and 3 months for warts to appear on your genitals. You or your partner may notice pinkish/white small lumps or larger cauliflower shaped lumps on the genital are. Warts can appear around the vulva, the penis, the scrotum or the anus. They may occur singly or in groups. They may itch, but are usually painless. Often there are no other symptoms, and the warts may be difficult to see. If a woman has warts on her cervix, this may cause slight bleeding or, very rarely, an unusual coloured vaginal discharge.
GONORRHOEA
Gonorrhoea is a bacterial infection. It is sexually transmitted and can infect the cervix, urethra, rectum, anus and throat. Symptoms of infection may show up at anytime between 1 and 14 days after exposure. It is possible to be infected with gonorrhoea and have no symptoms. Men are far more likely to notice symptoms than women.
GUT INFECTIONS
Gut Infections can be passed on during sex. Two of the most common infections are Amoebiasis and Glardiasis. They are bacterial infections, and when they reach your gut they cause diarrhoea and stomach pains. Gut infections can be passed on when having sex with someone who is infected, especially during activities that involve contact with faeces, such as rimming and anal sex. Infection can be prevented through using condoms, dental dams or latex gloves, sex toys should be thoroughly cleaned after use and hands washed with faces. Anti-diarrhoea treatments should be enough to treat most infections, but antibiotics can also be used.
THRUSH
Thrush, also known as candiasis, is a yeast which lives on the skin and is normally kept in check by harmless bacteria. If this yeast multiplies however, it can cause itching, swelling, soreness and discharge in both men and women. Women may experience a thick white discharge and pain when passing urine. Men may experience the same discharge in the penis and difficulty pulling back the foreskin. Thrush can be passed on when having sex with someone who is infected, but also if you wear too tight nylon or lycra clothes or if you are taking certain antibiotics. Sometimes the cause may be unclear however.
Transmission can be prevented by using condoms during sex and by men washing underneath their foreskin. Treatment for thrush involves taking or applying anti fungal treatments. Thrush can reoccur, especially in women.
Faze4u – Will like the cheaters, players alike to use condoms, “if you cannot stop this habit of cheating.
Fact, Men and Women with HIV have been known to purposely infect people they sleep with or have sex with, you have been warned.
SOURCES:
- This page was written and edited by Ben Hills-Jones and Jenni Fredricksson-Bass. Some of the information on this page was originally produced in the form of factsheets by Health Promotion England. Copies of the leaflets can be ordered in the United Kingdom through the NHS response line, on Tel: 08701 555 455.
- Crown copyright material is reproduced with permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen’s printer for Scotland.
HIV
We all know by now what HIV is and what it means to be HIV positive.
It is vital that sexually active women carry condoms with some men in society knowingly
Infecting women the risk is too high these days to sleep or cheat or have sex with a stranger.
So if you like to gamble or take risks it’s entirely up to you, you will eventually pay the price for not using condoms. Then after you get infected you will start blaming yourself for not protecting yourself by using condoms, if only I did this or that, I might not have been infected.





