Digging into the "Danger Basket"
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Many men hire professional escorts (meaning upscale, high-cost intimacy providers, who work by appointment). Single people trying to stay away from emotional attachments, or in search of something new and exiting. Married or attached people, who's relationships lack intimacy and adventure, or are simply too afraid to ask their partner for what they want. The clientele of every escort is quite diverse, and since professional escorts see such wide spectrum of men, from all walks of life, and have more intimate encounters than other girls, the health risk they bring is presumably higher.
Every sexually active person is aware of the health risks connected to sex and know that, every intimate partner is a potential health risk, it matters not if they are paid or not. Learning and practising safe sex is the best way to protect your self 99% of the time.
According to research, having casual sex is riskier than having escort sex.
It is more likely to get infected with STDs with regular dating and one night stands, than with an escort service. Most escorts are professionals, who take their sexual health much more seriously than the average girls.
Escorts often are at low risk for most STDs. However, this depends on the individual escort, on her selection of low- risk clients and consistent use of condoms.
For example. Younger single clients, clients who drink excessively, take drugs, go clubbing often or clients who ask for unprotected oral or vaginal sex are considered high-risk clients, and it is assumed they are often exposing themselves to unprotected sex with random partners. Such high-risk individual are denied by the high-class escorts.
High-class escorts are checked frequently for STDs, and tests are scheduled regularly or immediately after, case of a "condom accidents". Whether you are having sex with an escort or not, a condom can break. There is inherent risk that comes with sex, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it.
The only way to never be at any kind of STDs risk, is to never have sex.
Please read that very detailed article bellow, about how to practise safe sex and protect yourself from STDs.
https://www.plannedparenthood.org/learn/stds-hiv-safer-sex/safer-sex
How does safer sex help protect me from STDs?
STDs are infections that are passed from one person to another during sexual activity. Anybody who has oral, anal, or vaginal sex, or genital skin-to-skin contact with another person can get STDs. Safer sex (often called “safe sex”) means taking steps to protect yourself and your partner from STDs when you have sex.
There are lots of ways you can make sex safer. One of the best ways is by using a barrier — like condoms, female condoms, and/or dental dams — every single time you have oral, anal, or vaginal sex. Barriers cover parts of your genitals, protecting you and your partner from body fluids and some skin-to-skin contact, which can both spread STDs.
Getting tested for STDs regularly is also part of safer sex, even if you always use condoms and feel totally fine. Most people with STDs don’t have symptoms or know they’re infected, and they can easily pass the infection to their partners. So testing is the only way to know for sure whether or not someone has an STD.
Getting tested protects you by letting you know if you DO have an STD, so you can get the right treatment to stay healthy and avoid giving it to other people.
Sticking to sexual activities that don’t spread STDs — like outercourse or mutual masturbation (masturbating while with each other) — is a great way to safely get sexual pleasure and be intimate with another person. But if you’re taking off underwear and touching each other or having any kind of sex, using barriers is the safer way to go.
Another way to make sex safer is to avoid drinking too much alcohol or doing other drugs. Getting wasted can make you forget how important safer sex is, and you may accidentally make decisions that increase your chances of getting STDs. It’s also harder to use condoms correctly and remember other safer sex basics when you’re drunk or high.
The only way to be totally sure you won’t get an STD is to never have any kind of sexual contact with another person. But that doesn’t work for the vast majority of people — most of us are sexually intimate with other people at some point in our lives. So if you’re going to have sex, making it safer sex is the best way to help you avoid getting or passing an STD.
How do you get STDs?
STDs are usually passed from one person to another during oral, anal, or vaginal sex. There are lots of different STDs. Some are carried in body fluids like semen (cum), vaginal fluids, and blood. Others can be passed just from skin-to-skin touching with an infected body area. Using barriers like condoms and dams helps you avoid contact with fluids and some types of skin-to-skin contact during sex. So when you don’t use condoms, your chance of getting an STD goes up.
All STDs can infect your genitals. Vaginal or anal sex without a condom has a high risk for passing:
chlamydia
gonorrhea
syphilis
HIV
herpes
HPV and genital warts
hepatitis B
pubic lice
scabies
trichomoniasis
Some STDs can also infect your lips, mouth, and throat. Oral sex without a condom or dam has a high risk for passing:
herpes
syphilis
gonorrhea
HPV
hepatitis B
Some STDs can be passed even if there’s only some skin on skin action with no fluids passed. Genital skin-to-skin contact can spread:
herpes
HPV
pubic lice
scabies
Are some kinds of sex safer than others?
Yup. There are even a few totally risk-free ways to get sexual pleasure and be intimate with another person, like masturbating, and dry humping (aka grinding) with clothes on.
Low risk activities include kissing, touching your partner’s genitals with your hands, using sex toys with a partner, dry humping (grinding) without clothes, and oral sex. But it’s still possible to get certain STDs from these things, so using condoms and dams to avoid contact with skin and fluids whenever you can helps you stay healthy.
Having vaginal or anal sex without a condom is super risky. You can get any and all STDs from unprotected vaginal or anal sex. The best way to protect yourself if you’re going to have vaginal or anal sex is use a condom every single time. Using lube with that condom also makes sex safer, especially anal sex.
When it comes to HIV, oral sex is much safer sex than vaginal or anal sex. But other infections, like herpes, syphilis, hepatitis B, gonorrhea, and HPV, can be passed during oral sex. So no matter what kind of sex you have, use condoms or dams to make it safer.
If I have an STD, how can I have safer sex?
If you find out that you have an STD, it’s important to know how to have safer sex and avoid passing it on. Luckily, many STDs can be easily cured with medication, so once you finish treatment, you don’t have to worry about giving your STD to anyone.
And even though some STDs can’t be cured, there are ways to treat your symptoms and help avoid giving your STD to people you have sex with. Depending on what STD you have, there are things you can do to protect your partners. Here’s a handy checklist:
Always use condoms and dental dams during oral, anal, and vaginal sex — whether or not you have an STD.
Don’t have sex at all if you have any STD symptoms (like sores or warts around your genitals, weird discharge from your penis, vagina or anus, or itching, pain, irritation and/or swelling in your penis, vagina, vulva, or anus).
Go see a doctor or nurse so they can start treating your STD as soon as possible.
If you have a curable STD (like gonorrhea, chlamydia, or syphilis), take all of your medication the way your doctor tells you to, even if your symptoms go away sooner. The infection stays in your body until you totally finish the treatment. Your partner(s) should also be treated at the same time. Don’t have sex at all until you both finish your treatment, and your doctor or nurse says it’s OK.
If you have an STD that can’t be cured (like HIV or herpes), talk with your doctor about medicines that can help lower your chances of spreading it to a partner. Depending on what STD you have and where it is, you may need to use condoms/dams every time you have oral, anal, and/or vaginal sex.
Stay safe everyone.... and don't forget to smile!
Nicole xxx
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