Vagina Wash Soap Trigger HIV infection

Carefully clean up your female intimate zone. The use of a common soap for women was possible cancer.

A new study showed that intravaginal practices used by women like Miss V with soap actually increases risk of HIV infection.

Nicola Low, University of Bern, Switzerland says, women tend to intravaginal practices that would endanger their health, including HIV prevention research in black Africa to use.

The authors collected data from 13 studies of individual participants in the Saharan Africa, where nearly 15,000 women, found 791 of them were infected with HIV and found that HIV infection within two years associated with intravaginal practices, as written in the Times of India.

After adjustment for age, marital status, women who use a clean cloth or paper the area they have a risk of intimate and a half times more likely to develop HIV infection than those who use soap. Not only that, the use of the product to reduce or vaginal dryness, and intimate local cleaning with soap turn also become the greatest opportunities for women infected with HIV.

When women use soap to clean private parts will lead to the development of bacterial vaginosis and bacterial vaginosis. Two conditions were strongly associated with an increased risk of HIV transmission.

The findings are already included in systematic reviews recently which that intravaginal area cleaning practices will increase susceptibility to HIV infection showed. Although plausible, but recognized expert evidence is still lacking. Community women who have joined in an attempt to measure the impact of behavioral interventions to prevent HIV transmission such. They helped the U.S. to stop young men exercising their intimate wash with soap like women in Saharan Africa that ultimately do harm to their sexual organs.

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