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Danger on the Set

A porn star's early retirement has industry insiders talking STDs

Belladonna, the unique and popular porn performer whom I profiled earlier this year ("AVN Adult Entertainment Expo: Day 4), shocked fans last week when she blogged that she would no longer be performing. Her announcement came after she returned home from the set of a movie and discovered an enormous rash on her ass. Her doctor told her it was probably a herpes outbreak, but he'd test it to be sure. Belladonna knew she had herpes; she had contracted it five years ago while working in porn. For her, it was the tipping point: Until now, she had only experienced outbreaks on her labia, but what if the herpes spread to her ass, her mouth, and other parts of her body? On the one hand, she's not alone: Some insiders think that nearly every performer has herpes. But in another sense, she's all alone. Her post shined a light on one thing no one wants to talk about in porn: STDs.

The porn industry doesn't fall under the watchful eye of any government agency; it is self-regulating and has created certain rules that performers are required to follow. The Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation, known as AIM (aim-med.org), is a nonprofit organization that does all the STD testing for the porn industry. It was founded in 1997 as the centralized place for HIV testing, and today it provides full STD testing and treatment as well as other medical services. The industry now requires that all performers arrive on a set with an AIM test no older than 30 days with negative results for HIV, chlamydia, and gonorrhea. While AIM tests for other STDs, performers are not required to disclose those results; Belladonna's post broke the silence about herpes and other risks.

So why doesn't everyone use condoms to protect themselves? The gay-male-porn industry adopted a widespread policy of mandatory condom use, but the straight-porn world has not followed suit. At the height of an HIV outbreak in 2004, which infected four performers, there was a quarantine period, followed by announcements from some companies that they'd be condom-only. By 2006, the policies were abandoned, and nearly all straight porn shot today is condom-free. The rationale is that consumers don't want to see condoms in what's supposed to be a fantasy. Some producers claim that movies with condoms sell drastically fewer copies than movies without them. Performers themselves have mixed opinions. Many would love to use them for every scene, but don't out of fear of losing work. Others, including women, say that it makes sex less comfortable or more difficult. Some male performers find that condoms hamper their ability to maintain an erection—thus the scenes take longer to shoot.

"I'd like to put a condom on everyone who walks in the door, but this is the porn industry, and I know that's not going to happen," says Sharon Mitchell, the executive director of AIM and a former performer. Mitchell says porn stars have a lot more sexual partners but get fewer STDs compared to others in the same age group. According to her, AIM tests about 2,000 people each month, and only 2.8 percent test positive for an STD. That's well below comparable national rates: In the U.S., about 22 percent of people ages 15 to 24 get an STD each year. (The CDC groups 15- to 19-year-olds and 20- to 24-year-olds. The majority of porn stars are 18 to 24, which overlaps the two age categories.) Mitchell says AIM has treated about 25 to 30 percent of performers for HPV and now vaccinates both women and men with the HPV vaccine.

If everyone is being rigorously tested, why do people still become infected? We're dealing with a group of people who are at a stage in life not known for great responsibility. Says Belladonna: "People don't care—they'll work when they know they have an STD. Many live paycheck to paycheck." Mitchell agrees and says that about 30 percent of performers resent the fact that they have to test monthly: "They think it's just a pain in the ass and that they are immune to everything." Here's a typical scenario that explains how STDs still get passed around: Two days ago, Susie had unprotected sex with her boyfriend/a stranger/a friend who gave her chlamydia. Today, she arrives on a set with a clean test she took two weeks ago (still valid for another two weeks). She has no symptoms (since many people with STDs don't have symptoms), so she does her scene and infects John and Mary, and they both go on to work with others. All this continues until the next time one of them gets tested.

And then there's herpes, the trickiest of all STDs. Ninety percent of Americans have been exposed to HSV-1 (the virus that causes most cases of oral herpes), and more than one in five Americans are infected with genital herpes (most often caused by HSV-2). Mitchell estimates that about 50 percent of performers have either HSV-1 or HSV-2. The problem with herpes is that it's treatable but incurable, plus you could be on the verge of an outbreak, have no symptoms, yet still infect someone. One of the reasons Belladonna got so ruffled by her rash is that she hasn't caught another STD in four years. She attributes this to her personal policy of requiring anyone she works with to have a current test that's three days old or less. She chooses to work only one or two times a month (women can work every day and guys can work twice a day). Belladonna called me last Friday with good news: The rash was a skin infection, not a herpes outbreak. But that hasn't changed her mind. She says she plans to make one more movie—a big feature for her own company—then retire from performing.

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  • TwoTonScone 01/15/2012 9:27:00 AM

    It's odd how people act so weirdly about HSV-2. The difference between HSV-1 and HSV-2 is almost irrelevant to contemplate, as they're pretty much the exact same thing. The only REAL difference is in their viral DNA. They act the same, look the same, infect the same, and can each appear on almost any area of the human body. A person with oral HSV-1 can give it to another person's genitals. And a person who performs oral on someone with HSV-2 genital herpes can get oral herpes. The two types are not region-specific. It annoys the crap out of me that people think those with genitals herpes are dirty, untouchable, gross people. But the 70-80% of adults who have been exposed to HSV-1 orally are ok? Hypocrisy at its best. This shows how uneducated people are. Also, about it spreading over your body - that is only likely in people who have severe infections, illnesses, HIV, chemo, or other things that would impair the immune system. In healthy people with herpes, after they've had it for a while, the body goes through a process known as seroconversion. After that, autoinoculation (re-infecting a new part of your body with the same herpes), is actually quite unlikely. This story is old, and I think her rash turned out to be something else. Makes sense since she's probably completely seroconverted. She has also gone back into porn.

  • 01/11/2012 11:10:00 PM

    Alienabduction764, Don't you think that it's unfair to call Belladonna and "others" despicable? The people in the industry know the risk of contracting any number of diseases, and they participate anyway. It's up to the individual to take responsibilities for their own actions. If you don't want to contract and spread STD's don't go into porn.

  • Snavin11 05/03/2011 6:29:00 PM

    If your interested to control your sets from std s and cut down the spread of hsv check out vitacide.com it works and there is nothing else like it mention the name Sean and make the industry a better place

  • Sleep Apnea Cures 03/03/2011 6:44:00 AM

    I love that photo caption "An enormous rash on Belladonna's ass may've forced her into early retirement." You's never see that in the sports section!

  • Devin Brindinshire 02/28/2011 2:33:00 AM

    Mitchell's estimate that 50% of performers are infected with HSV-2 is likely far short of the truth. In the general U.S. population, 16% are thought to be infected overall - but that number goes up to 27% among people who have had more than 7 sexual partners. Given the fact that these performers are having sex with literally hundreds of people, estimating that the percentage is only 50% is likely naive.

  • Alienabduction764 01/20/2011 2:18:00 AM

    Belladonna and other's like her are despicable. They work and infect unknowing people who many times have spouses and significant others who become infected, and she only quit when she felt the risk to her had become too great. And the description of porn actors having lower STD counts is inaccurate, because they are only referring to the 3 STD's that will prevent them from working, not any of the other ones (such as herpes). From my extensive reading, the majority of pornographic actors have it.

  • K12 K12 12/29/2010 10:34:00 AM

    Well it's an old post, but as I understand what they mean here is that 90% of americans are exposed to HSV-1 (oral herpes), whereas about 20% of americans are exposed to genital herpes (caused mostly by HSV-2), compared to 50% of porn performers having genital herpes. So porn stars have a higher chance of getting genital herpes (20% vs 50%), since it's incurable once you get it, but you have a lesser chance of getting other STDs. Rocco Siffredi once said that every professional in the porn industry has herpes.

  • Bob tell 12/29/2009 1:21:00 AM

    The article states that porn stars are 40% less likely to carry herpes than the general population? 50% vs 90% What's the sexual health lesson here? Become a porn star and reduce your herpes risk by 40%, apparently. The general population: "Ninety percent of Americans have been exposed to HSV-1 (the virus that causes most cases of oral herpes)" The porn star: "Mitchell estimates that about 50 percent of performers have either HSV-1 or HSV-2"

 

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