The bizarre incident has surfaced in the Sualkuchi district of Assam. The girl took the term 'unconditional love and every quote on love a bit too seriously. She injected her boyfriend's HIV-positive blood into her body for expressing her deep love for him (representational image - Unsplash)
The bizarre incident has surfaced in the Sualkuchi district of Assam. The girl took the term 'unconditional love and every quote on love a bit too seriously. She injected her boyfriend's HIV-positive blood into her body for expressing her deep love for him (representational image - Unsplash) 
MedBound Blog

Girl injects HIV+ blood of her boyfriend into her body for love!

Dr. Amey Patil

We're already living in strange times, and things couldn't have gotten any weirder. A 15-year-old girl in Assam injected her boyfriend's HIV-positive blood into her body.

The bizarre incident has surfaced in the Sualkuchi district of Assam. The girl took the term 'unconditional love and every quote on love a bit too seriously. She injected her boyfriend's HIV-positive blood into her body for expressing her deep love for him.

The 15-year-old girl met her boyfriend on Facebook. The boy hails from Satdola in Hajo. The duo has been in a relationship for a period of three years. The connection between them has strengthened over the years.

The girl had fled away with her boyfriend a couple of times. However, she was always brought back to her parents. This time, however, the girl had sinister plans of expressing her affection toward her boyfriend.

The girl had fled away with her boyfriend a couple of times. However, she was always brought back to her parents. This time, however, the girl had sinister plans of expressing her affection toward her boyfriend (representational image - Unsplash)

The girl took blood from the body of her HIV-positive boyfriend with a syringe and injected it into her body. The barbaric act suddenly caught the attention of the entire country. Hajo police have arrested the boy, and the girl is currently under medical observation.

A small amount of blood is enough to infect someone. The concentration of virus in blood can change, in the same person, over time.

Chhattisgarh: 3-Year-Old Boy Dies after Consuming Dry Ice at Wedding

Surgeons Remove 16.7 KG ‘Gunny Bag’ Tumor in 10-Hour Surgery at Gurgaon

Job Losses Help Explain Increase In Drug Deaths Among Black Americans

Research Shows Genomic Changes Linked to Transmissibility of Monkeypox Virus

Transforming Agriculture and Medicine: The Impact of Gene-Based Breeding (GBB)