Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a different strain, not the sexually transmitted kind.
Oh wow. Do you really not understand that you can give someone HSV1 on their genitals?
People know that.
The stat about 60-75% percent of people is related to mouth cold sores.
I would not disclose this. Its NBD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a different strain, not the sexually transmitted kind.
Oh wow. Do you really not understand that you can give someone HSV1 on their genitals?
Anonymous wrote:It’s a different strain, not the sexually transmitted kind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t bother. I also think it’s way more than 60% have it—I always thought it was one of those things almost everyone has which is why no one really talks about it.
I don't know anyone that has it. Why would you think more than 60 percent have it?
CDC data. 60% of people age 40-49 have it, it's about 75% of people age 50 and up.
Post link--those numbers seem high. Oh and OP, yes, you do need to disclose instead of assuming almost everyone has it.
OP here
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db304.htm
It's in figure 1.
Hopkins says its 50-80%, perhaps as high as 90%.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/herpes-hsv1-and-hsv2/oral-herpes
My doctor was surprisingly nonchalant about it, said most people have it, everyone who makes it to 80 will get it, and looked at me like I had 2 heads when I asked about disclosing it.
While my last stretch of being single was in my mid-late 20s, I literally had not one person disclose to me, which is interesting since at least half the people I hooked up with had it. That's why I am posing the question, seems odd no one ever discloses this, is it because most people who have it don't know.
And yes, I am leaning towards disclosure before oral for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to disclose.
Also if a person gets HSV-1 genital herpes they will have much milder outbreaks than if they had gotten HSV-2 genital herpes, and the HSV1 will generally protect against HSV2 infection. So there’s that.
OP here, yes that's interesting and in the data, most genital HSV 1 has few to zero recurrences. Also, it's almost impossible to spread HSV 1 to another area of the body, so if she has it "down there" I don't have to worry since I have it "Up here"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to disclose.
Also if a person gets HSV-1 genital herpes they will have much milder outbreaks than if they had gotten HSV-2 genital herpes, and the HSV1 will generally protect against HSV2 infection. So there’s that.
OP here, yes that's interesting and in the data, most genital HSV 1 has few to zero recurrences. Also, it's almost impossible to spread HSV 1 to another area of the body, so if she has it "down there" I don't have to worry since I have it "Up here"
Anonymous wrote:You have to disclose.
Also if a person gets HSV-1 genital herpes they will have much milder outbreaks than if they had gotten HSV-2 genital herpes, and the HSV1 will generally protect against HSV2 infection. So there’s that.
Anonymous wrote:You have to disclose.
Also if a person gets HSV-1 genital herpes they will have much milder outbreaks than if they had gotten HSV-2 genital herpes, and the HSV1 will generally protect against HSV2 infection. So there’s that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t bother. I also think it’s way more than 60% have it—I always thought it was one of those things almost everyone has which is why no one really talks about it.
I don't know anyone that has it. Why would you think more than 60 percent have it?
CDC data. 60% of people age 40-49 have it, it's about 75% of people age 50 and up.
Post link--those numbers seem high. Oh and OP, yes, you do need to disclose instead of assuming almost everyone has it.