Blind Item #9
This NBA player, who is HIV+, still likes to pretend he is suffering from other health issues.
This NBA player, who is HIV+, still likes to pretend he is suffering from other health issues.
Posted by ent lawyer at 2:45 AM
Labels: blind item
Chris Mosch
ReplyDelete*Bosch
ReplyDeletehttp://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/14942245/chris-bosh-miami-heat-says-no-blood-clots-hoping-return
ReplyDeletekobe
ReplyDeletechris bosch
ReplyDeleteChris Bosh has blood clots whixh may cause his retirement they say
ReplyDeleteAll I'm gonna say is that Magic played.
ReplyDeleteAll he says is "I do not have DVT" which is undoubtedly true.
ReplyDeleteI need to work this into my day-to-day conversation.
"Good morning! I am not diabetic right now"
"Great presentation - I didn't have a heart attack in the parking lot a minute ago!"
Slick.
+1000
ReplyDeleteI don't believe this one.
ReplyDeleteKordell Stewart
ReplyDeleteMe either.
ReplyDeleteMe either
ReplyDeleteThis is a gross violation of a patient's privacy
ReplyDeleteToo bad it is a blind, and the slime ball owners of this site cannot be sued
Hope not. I like him a lot.
ReplyDeleteThis is fake. There is no way they'd let a player that is HIV+ play without it being public due to health concerns for others.
ReplyDeleteThis is fake. There is no way they'd let a player that is HIV+ play without it being public due to health concerns for others.They already make players get medical treatment the second blood is spotted for fear of anything happening. Plus the NBA would probably face one hell of a lawsuit if someone contracted it without knowing a player was HIV+ but the league knew
ReplyDeleteHis wife is also currently pregnant with twins I believe. She's super Obnoxious. I know you can conceive without passing the virus but it seems like a stretch in this case.
ReplyDeleteDennis Rodman? It doesn't say former however...
No idea who it is, but with the right meds, taken correctly, you can get viral loads down to undetectable levels - maybe enough to to pass an HIV screening test. As for an HIV infected male having a child, I think you can do IVF and remove the virus (not sure, though). A non-infected partner can also take pre-exposure prophylaxis to reduce their risk of infection. I would think (but again, not sure) that a combination of a HIV+ male on proper treatment, and an uninflected female on PreEP, would make transmission rates low enough that a couple might have unprotected sex to try to get pregnant.
ReplyDelete