Dr. London has not spoken without facts. Chill out Burk. Every guy on this board knows bbbj does not carry the same risk as bbfs. That's all I was saying. You said nuru carries the same risk as cim, which it does not. Not if it is done the way the video illustrated it. Take away her rubbing his weenie on her vagina and shooting his cum all over it, then we can talk about risk. It might be
less risk on the guy, but not on the woman...period! That's why so many guys are trying to suggest this is not harmful...kind of like with other things they want us to do lol. Cum in your mouth is still less risky than cum in your vagina. Last time I checked I didn't have a cervix in my mouth so HPV is out of that equation altogether, but here are some facts....
The last time major national surveys asked about this practice, in the early 1990s, only
20 percent of men aged 20 to 39 said they'd had anal sex with a woman in the preceding 10 years. Only
26 percent of men aged 18 to 59 said they'd ever done so. In the first survey, the 10-year limit excluded half the sexual career of half the sample, but that isn't enough to explain a doubling in the percentage saying yes. In the second survey, according to the current report, the inclusion of men aged 46 to 59 might have diluted the sample with "cohorts that were less likely to have had anal sex." But that's the point: Newer cohorts are more likely to have tried it.
Why does this matter?
Because anal sex is far more dangerous than oral sex. According to data released earlier this year by the Centers for Disease Control, the probability of HIV acquisition by the receptive partner in unprotected oral sex with an HIV carrier is one per 10,000 acts. In vaginal sex, it's 10 per 10,000 acts. In anal sex, it's 50 per 10,000 acts. Do the math. Oral sex is 10 times safer than vaginal sex. Anal sex is five times more dangerous than vaginal sex and 50 times more dangerous than oral sex. Presumably, oral sex is far more frequent than anal sex. But are you confident it's 50 times more frequent?
A CDC fact sheet
explains the risks of anal sex. First, "the lining of the rectum is thin and may allow the [HIV] virus to enter the body." Second, "condoms are more likely to break during anal sex than during vaginal sex." These risks don't just apply to HIV.
According to the new survey report, the risk of transmission of other sexually transmitted diseases is likewise "higher for anal than for oral sex," and the risk "from oral sex is also believed to be lower than for vaginal intercourse."