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wammt

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Everything posted by wammt

  1. Just had one of my accounts terminated.....
  2. I have received a piss enema, both from a funnel as well as an enema bag filled with piss. My own as well as multiple partners.
  3. Love getting it, but will also give.
  4. First give him a piss enema; followed by a beer enema. After that he is ready for just about anything. Make sure to keep the enemas in with a large buttplug. You can do it all in bondage. Follow it up with what 'Poz1956' suggested. Buddies taking bareback liberties also welcome.
  5. Love it, both the movie and it being done to me!!
  6. Thanks 'eightanddeep'. I know I will be getting one (I am poz). Just trying to decide where to put it.
  7. Yeah, they are slowwwwwwww.
  8. Updated my profile, and added the undetectable to the description.
  9. I know that Priape has them for sure (not sure about the quality though); MaxCita might have them and there are a few people that do custom work. Don't have contacts available right now.
  10. Heck, I have a pic in my profile and two albums and honestly don't know if my face is in any of them.
  11. @BearBandit: Well said!! I do feel the same way.
  12. It all depends on the airport/country on where you intend to travel. The sensititivity is mightily different from airport-to- airport; and in the case of a place like London Heathrow it differs from terminal to terminal. Anyways: No need to remove the jewelry because TSA has policies in place for handling this. Some agents may be unfamiliar with how to handle it, but you can direct them to the TSA website - URLS below. Print out the pages in question and bring them with you if you anticipate issues. From TSA website: body piercings "... can set off an alarm during metal detector detector or advanced imaging technology screening," and, "passengers ... have the option to resolve the alarm through a visual inspection of the article in lieu of removing the item in question." http://www.tsa.gov/press/happenings/lubbock.shtm http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/assistant/index.shtm
  13. Probably when I discovered sex. It just was a steady progression.
  14. There is a website for it: www.truckersucker.com/
  15. CDC Vital Signs- December 2011 Just in time for World Aids Day: http://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/HIVtesting/index.html
  16. Even better when it is recorded on video, so you can relive the moment.
  17. I am poz, a father and grandfather; and my kids are aware of my status and interests. No problem for them.
  18. '' If they don't meet your standards..... lower your standards.''
  19. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-15816813 Aids-related deaths are at the lowest level since their 2005 peak, down 21%, figures from UNAids suggest. Globally, the number of new HIV infections in 2010 was 21% down on that peak, seen in 1997, according to UNAids 2011 report. The organisation says both falls have been fuelled by a major expansion in access to treatment. Its executive director, Michel Sidibe, said: "We are on the verge of a significant breakthrough." He added: "Even in a very difficult financial crisis, countries are delivering results in the Aids response. "We have seen a massive scale up in access to HIV treatment which has had a dramatic effect on the lives of people everywhere." 'End in sight?' This latest analysis says the number of people living with HIV has reached a record 34 million. Sub-Saharan Africa has seen the most dramatic improvement, with a 20% rise in people undergoing treatment between 2009 and 2010. About half of those eligible for treatment are now receiving it. UNAids estimates 700,000 deaths were averted last year because of better access to treatment. That has also helped cut new HIV infections, as people undergoing care are less likely to infect others. In 2010 there were an estimated 2.7m new HIV infections, down from 3.2m in 1997, and 1.8m people died from Aids-related illnesses, down from 2.2m in 2005. The figures continue the downward trend reported in previous UNAids reports. The UN agency said: "The number of new HIV infections is 30-50% lower now than it would have been in the absence of universal access to treatment for eligible people living with HIV." Some countries have seen particularly striking improvements. In Namibia, treatment access has reached 90% and condom use rose to 75%, resulting in a 60% drop in new infections by 2010. UNAids says the full preventive impact of treatment is likely to be seen in the next five years, as more countries improve treatment. Its report added that even if the Aids epidemic was not over: "The end may be in sight if countries invest smartly." 'Promising moment' The charity Medecins Sans Frontieres urged governments to keep up their funding. MSF's Tido von Schoen-Angerer, said: "Never, in more than a decade of treating people living with HIV/Aids, have we been at such a promising moment to really turn this epidemic around. "Governments in some of the hardest hit countries want to act on the science, seize this moment and reverse the Aids epidemic. But this means nothing if there's no money to make it happen." The International HIV/Aids Alliance said: "We welcome the ongoing commitment of UNAids to changing behaviours, changing social norms and changing laws, alongside efforts to improve access to HIV treatment. "For bigger and better impact though, we must not be complacent. There is still much more to do."
  20. I hope that you don't mind, but I reproduced this post to the 'Kinky Enemas' group at NastyKinkPigs. The same thoughts have occurred to me.
  21. http://www.vancouversun.com/health/Public+health+agents+want+every+adult+having+tests/5671945/story.html If you’re an adult living in Vancouver or Prince George who’s had sex, chances are very good that you’ll be asked to take an HIV detection test at your next lab, hospital or medical clinic visit under Canada’s first such pilot project. You can refuse the offer but you won’t be able to avoid the HIV testing guerrilla marketing campaign delivered via social media, bus shelters and websites starting today. The “seek and treat” program is meant to identify up to 3,500 more cases of HIV in B.C. That’s the number of adults estimated to be infected who don’t know it, since symptoms of HIV can be silent for as many as 10 years, according to public health authorities. Under a four-year, $48-million program funded by the provincial government, family doctors are being urged to add on HIV testing for all their adult patients being sent for other types of blood tests. Many patients recently admitted and/or treated at St. Paul’s, Mount St. Joseph and Vancouver General Hospital have been offered the tests as well. UBC Hospital patients will be included as of next year. Intensive care patients, palliative and psychiatric will not be included in the screening program. Lab tests cost up to about $300. The initial test, if it is negative, costs between $10 and $25, depending on where it is done. If the initial screening test is positive, more tests are done to confirm the diagnosis. Lab tests done as part of routine blood work are cheaper which is why doctors are being urged to add on the HIV screening tests when ordering other tests. The program is purposely casting a wide net as it seeks those who are outside the usual HIV risk group scope, said Dr. Reka Gustafson, medical health officer, communicable disease control, for Vancouver Coastal Health. “No question about it, this is a big practice change. In the past, we have targeted people in high risk groups (like men who have sex with men) but now we need to go beyond that and offer tests to anyone who has ever had sex. It will not only reduce the stigma of such testing but it will also improve our early detection rates,” she said. Even before the program ramp-up this week, hospitals and doctors were ordering more HIV tests, resulting in more cases being detected. In the months of June, July and August last year, 45 cases of HIV were detected in Vancouver but in the same months this year, there were 78. Not all the Vancouver cases are city residents, as the data captures information based on where the prescribing doctor works, not where the patient resides. About 200,000 HIV tests are done annually in B.C. and such blood tests have detected nearly 14,000 cases of individuals now living with HIV. Last year, there were 301 new HIV cases in B.C; three of every 1,000 tests results in an HIV diagnosis. British research has demonstrated a cost benefit when the prevalence of diagnosis is one or two out of every 1,000 tests. “We expect our diagnostic yield be higher than that,” Gustafson said. Detecting and treating HIV especially in its early stage helps reduce medical costs and prevent further transmission. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) suppresses the virus to undetectable levels. B.C. research has shown that 40 per cent of those who died of HIV-related causes between 1997 and 2005 had never received the life-saving medication. Citing U.S. Centre for Disease Control research, Gustafson said lifetime HIV treatment costs nearly $400,000 per patient, but patients diagnosed early enough in their disease require less treatment, saving the health care system up to $61,000 per patient. About 14 per cent of people newly diagnosed have advanced disease at the time of diagnosis, which suggests they ignored symptoms or had no symptoms before they were tested. The screening program will be evaluated for effectiveness, including cost benefits, and if it is deemed to be successful, it is expected it will become part of routine health care. Sun Health Issues Reporter
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