Being that the vaccine only protects against 4 of the 16 viruses,
one would still have to ask their sex partner if they
had any 12 of the 16 viruses before they were safe.
The participants would have to be asking questions whether
someone was vaccinated or not. The way the vaccine protects
one is if that person agrees to sex or is forced into sex
with someone who has the PPV virus. It is a false security
if one person has 12 of the 16 viruses. Not a very competent
drug.
If anyone who has the virus and doesn't tell their partner they had it,
and passed it on, that person should be incarcerated or
even executed. Those measures would certainly cut the risk
of the infection spreading. No?
Best advice, avoidance. 2nd best, carry a gun if avoidance
impossible. 3rd best, make sure your partner doesn't have
any of the 16 viruses, 4th best...vaccine just in case
your partner is a 1)liar 2)jerk 3)poor memory...
Good strategy, that one. I've heard it also protects against herpes, AIDS, and chlamydia transmitted by the potential rapist. The winner (victim) is also warned to avoid contact with certain bodily goo that might contaminate the scene. The rapist's blood, organ tissue, and brain matter might carry bloodborne pathogens. Allow the forensics staff clean up the mess. They are trained professionals.