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STD Immunity

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"588. Paladins are immune to STDs, but if I take advantage of this ability, I lose it. Wonderful paradox, isn't it?"

Some stories will be absolutely blind to venereal disease.

Of course, many writers are aware of the risk of catching an STD, but since the plot of the story is not about somebody dealing with an STD they avoid bringing it up. This may have the unintended consequence that when a story is about catching/having an STD, the disease seems to be a punishment for a lifestyle, rather than a lapse in judgment or self-protection. Another consequence is that sex can be made to seem inconsequential.

This is no big deal if the story takes place in modern times (as it is usually assumed that they are using protection), but it can be downright egregious when the Ethical Slut and The Casanova live in an era before such protection existed and never catch the Great Pox or the Disease of Naples.

Of course, this can be justified if the story takes place in a fantastical setting where no STDs exist.

An obvious trope in most actual pornography. It helps that that genre offers wide latitude to Willing Suspension of Disbelief.

Sub-Trope of Ideal Illness Immunity. It almost always goes hand in hand with Unproblematic Prostitution. If this is part of a Free-Love Future, it may be related to We Will Have Perfect Health in the Future. Contrast the Tragic AIDS Story and Psychosexual Horror.


Examples:

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    Anime and Manga 

    Comic Books 
  • Subverted in Empowered; one issue has a founding member of the Super Team reveal that his origin story is having sex with a beautiful alien princess, only to get an alien STD which reacted with his human biology to turn him into a Blob Monster. Two other core members of the team then say their story is very similar, though they caught nanobots that turned them into techno-organic beings. It turns out this problem is so common that there are actually support groups for post-human STDs, and these three actually met for the first time at one of the sessions.
  • Averted in one of the Firefly comics when Jayne gets an STD after sleeping with a hooker off-panel, and has to go to Simon to get it checked out.
  • She-Hulk: Jennifer Walters must have this, as she not only has never had any known problems but also never had any children as a result of her numerous lovers over the years, something that has been an occasional problem for her cousin. Said cousin at one point carried a blood-soaked HIV patient in his arms to the hospital with the Hand Wave of "with my system, I'm immune".
  • Discussed in The Superior Foes of Spider-Man. As vengeance for one particular hero stopping his capers enough, Speed Demon sets up the hero with someone known to have the clap. Beetle points out that the hero in question was Hercules, who is literally a god who probably can't get mortal diseases at all. All Speed Demon managed to do was get The Pornomancer laid.
  • Top 10, a Police Procedural in a city populated entirely by super-people, features a prostitute called "Immune Girl" who has this as her superpower. Sadly, she's not immune to the local Serial Killer who's been targeting the city's hookers.
  • In Uncanny X-Men (Chuck Austen), there is a passing mention by Husk that mutants apparently can't get HIV. This was never mentioned before, was likely meant to function as a Hand Wave for why Archangel's healing blood didn't carry the really obvious health risk, and has never been mentioned again. Angel also mentions it, and a doctor confirms it.
  • Wolverine: This is part of the package Wolverine gets with his Healing Factor. In fact, he can't get sick, period. By extension, it also applies to Daken and X-23 — fortunate for the latter, especially, since she spent time as a prostitute.

    Fan Works 

Examples by source material:

  • The Dresden Files fanfiction often chalks this up to wizards having a low-level Healing Factor.
  • Harry Potter fics:
    • Fan Fic characters will usually cast a "contraceptive spell" before getting down to business. STDs are rarely mentioned, though in some, wizards simply can't catch normal Muggle diseases. They occasionally get bizarre magical ones, but that usually involves comical consequences like one's face being covered with feathers and is fixable with potions or a trip to the hospital.
    • In a fanfic called "The Talk" where when it's Lupin's turn to teach Harry about the "facts of life", one of the most important things he talked about was the kinds of diseases people could get when not using protection (both Muggles and Wizards ones). One particular horrible case was where it caused tentacles to appear down there, pus-filled tentacles that moved!
    • Throughout Harry Potter Becomes a Communist, Harry engages in apparently unprotected sex with various partners. There is no mention of STDs or, for that matter, pregnancy.
  • Teen Wolf fanfic authors like to claim that werewolves don't get STIs.

Examples by title:

  • A Changed World uses the aversion for a joke about James T. Kirk's love life. During First Contact with the Bajorans (from the official novel Allegiance in Exile), he apparently did what no human had done before and came down with a case of banta fever.
  • Guys Being Dudes: Averted. Before leaving Spark and Arlo to do whatever it is they do when Spark spends the night at Team GO Rocket HQ, Sierra interrogates them to make sure they've both been tested and are clean. Blanche also gives Arlo a lecture about safe sex during their and Candela's vetting of him as a love interest for Spark.
  • Brought up at least in How the Light Gets In. In a flashback, a furious Laurel informs Oliver that after the Gambit sank, she got herself tested for any STDs, concluding that if he cheated on her with her sister, he'd probably cheated on her with a lot of other women. It's indicated that she didn't have any (or if she did, she's been treated by now), but the risk was acknowledged at least.
    Laurel: Now tell me, Oliver, was that an overreaction?
    Oliver:...No, it wasn't.
  • The entire Naked In School universe (which does not include How Hogwarts Became a Nudist Colony) has this as a requirement, as bodily fluid transmissions are inevitable. Condoms are therefore unnecessary, as all contraception is taken care of via inoculation.
  • Starlight Over Detrot: Discussed in an opening monologue: ponies never had many genuinely dangerous STDs in their history, so compared to other races, they have a tendency towards more promiscuous behavior.
  • Vow of Nudity: It is mentioned that prostitutes have to regularly visit a temple to get healed of diseases. Played straight when the prostitute Spectra receives a Periapt of Health, which makes her immune to all diseases.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Averted in Cabin Fever; when two casual friends suddenly decide to jump into bed together, in the middle of a flesh-eating disease outbreak, the man is aware of how dangerous their affair is, and remarks to the woman how surprised he is that she didn't care about using a condom — while they're in the middle of having sex. The woman tries to assure him that she's healthy, though she has no way of knowing this for sure and doesn't seem to care one iota about the health risks. As it happens, rashes — which are the first symptom of the deadly disease — break out from the woman's lover's passionate squeezes on her back while they're still having sex. Sure enough, the woman quickly deteriorates and dies thereafter, and the man later falls ill himself — confirmed by a scene where he pulls up his hospital gown to find sickly welts just above his crotch.
  • In Dead End (1937), the protagonist's ex-girlfriend has become a prostitute and is implied to have syphilis. Her "sickness" goes unnamed, however.
  • Fatal Attraction: Dan sleeps with Alex, a woman he barely knows, without using a condom, as evidenced by him asking her about birth control. And the reason he's asking her this is that she's just told him that she's pregnant. Yet the thought that he might have caught something never enters his mind. And even if she thought she was infertile following a miscarriage, as she believed, the fact that she herself would still need to protect herself against disease clearly didn't occur to her either. Particularly glaring, since the film was made in 1987, a time when the AIDS crisis was in full swing (albeit it was often viewed as a "gay" plague).
  • Averted in First Girl I Loved; near the end of the film, Anne gets a test for HIV, worried due to being raped by Cliff when no protection was used. The result is negative.
  • In I Love You Phillip Morris, this is played straight when Steven dies of AIDS and Phillip, his lover, wonders why he wasn't affected (condoms are never mentioned). Subverted when it's shown that Steven was only faking his death and Phillip was never meant to find out. Though Steven's previous lover did actually die of the disease, so straight again, as Steven didn't catch the disease from him.
  • Two words: James Bond. No STDs, no known condom use, no accidental pregnancy (at least until No Time to Die). Saturday Night Live once did a sketch revealing that Bond has an unspeakably large amount of STDs.
  • Somewhat averted in Lost & Found (1999), when Lila warns herself against reconciling with her womanizing ex-boyfriend — "This is Rene. Liar. Cheat. Potential carrier of venereal disease."

    Jokes 
  • Sex in jokes usually plays this trope straight, as bringing this up isn't usually important to the punchline — the aversions are the funny ones.
    • Three prisoners who are condemned to death are given the choice between a straightforward execution and being infected with HIV. The first prisoner opts for a quick death rather than potentially suffering for years. The second opts for HIV, saying that he'd rather live as long as possible. The third also opts for HIV. As the executioner injects him, he begins laughing maniacally. He continues laughing as they walk him to the gate of the prison and release him. Finally, a guard asks him what could possibly be so funny when he just got injected with HIV. The man answers, "You can't give me AIDS, you idiot! I'm wearing a condom!" and takes off running.
    • A beautiful young woman goes to the gynecologist, and the doctor is immediately overcome with desire for her. He begins caressing her skin and asks, "Do you know what I'm doing?" She replies, "Yes, you're checking my skin for rashes, etc." He begins feeling up her boobs and asks, "Do you know what I'm doing now?" She nonchalantly replies, "Yes, you're checking my breasts for lumps." Overcome with lust, he climbs up on the table and enters her, saying, "Do you know what I'm doing... now?" She looks him in the eyes and says, "Yes, getting herpes."
    • An American man goes to China and sleeps unprotected with a prostitute. By the time he gets back to the States, his penis has turned green. He goes to his doctor, who shakes his head and says they'll have to amputate. Deciding to get a second opinion, another doc tells him the same thing. Suddenly he gets an idea — a Chinese doctor! The Chinese doctor looks at his penis and says he's seen this before. "Will you have to amputate?" the man asks — "Oh, no — not at all!" the Chinese doctor responds. The man is breathing a sigh of relief when the doctor says, "Two more days and it will fall off by itself!"

    Literature 

In general:

  • There are at least some amateur erotica writers who note (partially in humor) either in footnotes or in their profiles that all their stories are set in a world where STDs are non-existent or have been cured completely.
  • Nearly universal in period Romance Novels. Some authors have noted that this is a deliberate choice: romance novels are meant to be fantasies that definitionally come equipped with a Happily Ever After ending, not gritty, in-depth explorations of all the horrible ways that sex could go incurably wrong in the relevant periods. (It's much like how rarely the fairytale marriages lead to the complete legal subjugation of the heroine, and how unrealistically abundant non-despicable noblemen are. If those had to be depicted realistically, the genre wouldn't really exist.)
  • The women in Harlequin romance novels seem to be immune to STDs while being simultaneously extremely fertile; if any negative consequence of a sexual encounter arises, it will invariably be an unwanted pregnancy, which will always happen if attention is drawn to them having unprotected sex.

Specific:

  • Averted in All American Boy by William J. Mann where the main character visits a friend/mentor of his who is dying from AIDS. He also reveals that his previous lover caught the disease, while he's "clean" because they had an open relationship.
  • Between Worlds: Humans and aliens have no issue having unprotected sex with each other because the No Biochemical Barriers trope is averted, so no one's going to get pregnant. However, as regimental Champion, Jason tries to stop the marines from having sex with the Ufrians because that's how diseases cross the species barrier (which doesn't stop him from having unprotected sex with The Chief's Daughter later on).
  • Thoroughly and constantly averted in A Brother's Price: the fear of catching and passing on diseases seriously influences the culture and how it handles the rare men.
  • In Doctrine of Labyrinths, the POV characters have lots of sex in lots of ways with lots of partners (one is a male homosexual prostitute, one is a Good Bad Girl, one is a man who patronizes female prostitutes, and one is a man who patronizes male prostitutes), but nobody mentions disease or protection. Despite this being a high-fantasy series, magic isn't really a justification here, since much of the action is set in a country that bans the use of magic on people for any reason.
  • A Fox Tail has "Venereal Elimination of Diseases" shots that are good against most STDs in the known universe. They're expensive, but then again, the more promiscuous main character used to electronically rob banks for fun.
  • Averted in Gate. There's a scene where a prostitute in the Special Region's capital wonders to a modern medical officer why the Men in Green (the JSDF) don't patronize them at all. The medic glares at a very heavy report at her side, titled "A Report on Sexually Transmitted Diseases in the Special Region". Later, they rescue a Japanese girl who was used as a sex slave; one of the exams they do is give her an STD test.
  • Played for Laughs in The Good Soldier Švejk, set during World War I — one character describes his futile attempts to catch a venereal disease in order to avoid military service. To his despair, he remained as fit as a fiddle.
  • Averted in Guardians of the Flame. In her Backstory, Doria caught an STD and was too embarrassed to see a doctor about it; the resulting infection left her sterile and with issues about sex. Subsequent brutal rape does not help, either.
  • Averted in "Human Remains" by Clive Barker. Gavin, a male prostitute, does not mind occasionally dealing with crabs, but gonorrhoea, which he has caught twice, is really bad for business as it means three weeks off work.
  • The Kingdom of Little Wounds is described by the author as "a fairy tale about syphilis." This trope is attacked savagely.
  • Never fully explained in the Kushiel's Legacy books, though the ability to avoid pregnancy is. It may just be a D'Angeline thing.
  • Averted in Letters to His Son: Lord Chesterfield mentions "a whoremaster with half a nose" (i.e., caused by syphilis), maybe to Scare 'Em Straight.
  • Averted in The Name of the Wind. In Kvothe's part of the world, it's rarely mentioned (because it's not really that relevant to him), but the Adem describe going to great lengths to avoid or remove venereal diseases. Kvothe notes how important this is in light of the amount of sex they have and with how many partners.
  • Never Wipe Tears Without Gloves is an aversion, with most of the cast dead of AIDS by the end. Then again, the book is a semi-autobiographical look at the ravages of HIV/AIDS in Stockholm's gay community in the early eighties, and removing AIDS would have been missing the point in an epic way.
  • Shadow of the Leviathan: The protagonist's Bio-Augmentations include disease resistance, which his superior lampshades when scolding him over his promiscuity in the second book:
    Ana: I mean, thank Sanctum you've got some of the Empire's best immunities in your blood, otherwise your wick would've surely rotted off ages ago!
  • Painfully averted in Someone Else's War, a book about Child Soldiers trying to survive and escape their horrific lives.
  • The Teresa Knight Trilogy: Averted. STDs are explicitly mentioned as a threat to people who have a lot of casual sex. The sex clubs portrayed all require members to be tested first before joining.
  • Averted in These Words Are True and Faithful when it's discovered that Ernie has been cheating on Sam:
    "Dude," said Nathan, "you need to get tested for every STI known to modern medicine and six that aren't. You don't know where else our hero in blue has been sticking it, and besides, I'll bet his new sweetheart is a walking Petri dish."
  • To Sail Beyond the Sunset: The "good" protagonist never has a problem with STDs, despite a very healthy sex life. Her "bad" daughter, however, gets some. At least the "good" protagonist does actually use condoms, although only for birth control. When she is pregnant or willing to have children with someone during "spouse swapping", she skips the condom. Yet the STDs know to leave her alone since she is "good".
  • Whateley Universe: while the risks involved in sexual activity and the importance of suitable protection are mentioned, both by the school administration and in the Fictional Document Sara's Little Purple Book (a sex manual for the superpowered which gets passed around in secret by the students), so far the only reported instance of someone on-campus contracting an STD came from a magical curse (which backfired, affecting everyone in one of the dorms EXCEPT the target) despite the rampant bed-hopping among these teenaged superbeings. Since STDs explicitly do occur off-campus (as does Teen Pregnancy; it is stated outright that Exemplars are far more likely to get pregnant than baseline girls due to their lack of impulse control and heightened fertility), it has led to the fan theory (possibly substantiated in-story) that the school is secretly applying magical contraception and disease protection to the students.
  • The Witcher: One of the alchemically induced mutations involved in creating witchers includes improvements to their immune system that grant Ideal Illness Immunity, including to STDs. This, along with their sterility (a side effect of the mutations), is part of the reason they have a reputation for Really Getting Around.
  • Averted in Without Remorse when protagonist John Kelly contracts a venereal disease from the abused woman he rescues. The doctors cure him without revealing it after she is murdered.
  • Averted and played with in Youth in Sexual Ecstasy: The protagonist discovers that he has herpes right after having sex with the school's most attractive girl, then is told that, given the sudden onset of symptoms, it's unlikely he got it from her and more likely that he infected her. He is also given the serious advice of tracking down all his previous sexual partners to warn them about it. Then he later learns that the girl was indeed infected, but with syphilis; how he didn't get the disease from her is never explained.

    Live-Action TV 
  • All My Children: Julia fears she had contracted HIV from her rapist, but ultimately tests negative. Also with Dixie, who angrily tells her husband that she went to her doctor to be tested for everything after discovering his infidelity, but fortunately received a clean bill of health.
  • As the World Turns: Although she's horrified to learn that the man who raped her had AIDS, Margo fortunately does not contract it, despite him not using a condom when he assaulted her.note 
  • In one episode of Bomb Girls, Gladys's fiancé James is infected with gonorrhea (referred to as "the clap") after cheating on her with a woman who's known to have had many sexual partners. He's treated with penicillin.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer:
    • Faith has been stated to have lots of casual sex with no hint of condom usage yet never gets pregnant or infected. This might be due to her being a Slayer, but it's worth noting that at least one Slayer had a child (Nikki Wood). Vampires are also likely immune to STDs and are mentioned in Angel to be unable to have children (for the painfully obvious reason that they are dead).
    • Averted in an episode where Buffy has sex with Riley, who is shown reaching for a condom before they start.
    • Averted in the backstory with Darla. She was a prostitute dying of syphilis when she was turned into a vampire, which presumably "cured" her of the disease.
  • An aversion is actually a plot point in the Castle (2009) episode "The Final Frontier". Gabriel Winters's alibi for the murder of his former co-star, now-business partner, is that he was at the doctor's office getting treated for an STD.
  • Sam Malone from Cheers is apparently immune to all sexual diseases in spite of his Don Juan lifestyle. The closest he comes to picking something up is when it looks like he might've gotten a woman pregnant, but it turns out to be a false alarm. The writers of the show once considered addressing this by having an episode where it would've looked like Sam had contracted AIDS, though the plot never made it to air due to fear that it couldn't be handled in good taste (the episode would have aired in 1988, when the AIDS epidemic was in full swing). Later episodes have Sam mentioning "going to the drug store", implying that Sam is conscientious about condom use.
  • Averted in The City (1995) after Sydney is raped by her husband Jared. When she goes to her doctor for an exam, she is very adamant about being tested for HIV and STDs (this is a standard part of a rape exam regardless), given Jared's penchant for infidelity.
  • Criminal Minds provides a strange case. People generally are aware of the risks of unprotected sex, so this trope is largely averted (e.g., "Paradise", "The Slave of Duty") — but the frequency of unprotected sex during the series makes one wonder if anyone even bothers with condoms to begin with. Surely some of the UnSubs might have gotten away if they did think about it.
  • Degrassi: The Next Generation: In one episode, there's an outbreak of gonorrhea. Alex finds out that Jay was cheating after he was found to have an STD, and some girls also got it from having oral sex with him. This includes Emma, who's to kiss a boy in a school play, but he gives her a fake kiss for fear of being infected. She doesn't seem to care about infecting him, and is called out for it by her friend.
  • Averted in the very first episode of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman when local prostitute Myra asks to see the title character about "a female problem". Afterwards, Dr. Quinn tells her employer Hank that she needs to be "chaste" for several weeks. When he complains about the loss of revenue, she warns him that he'll lose even more if she has to treat his customers too. In a later episode, Hank himself alerts her to the fact that her sister Marjorie is ill, citing that she's displaying the same symptoms that he's often seen in his girls. The specific illness is never named, but given Myra's profession and Marjorie's unfaithful husband, it's still obvious what the problem is.
  • ER:
    • Hospital stud Doug Ross managed to have drunken one-night stands with numerous women, yet never caught anything — a fanfic actually has him citing how lucky he was.
    • Averted with Jeannie Boulet, who caught HIV from her cheating husband and feared she had given it to her boyfriend. She hadn't, playing the trope straight again in his case.
    • Also averted with Carter, who caught an unspecified STD from a random girl he picked up.
  • Joey from Friends is often the butt of these sorts of jokes. For instance, Chandler notes that Joey's advice will be useful if it's about "pizza toppings or a burning sensation when you pee". However, he is actually shown to be conscientious about condom use, to the point of seemingly carrying condoms at all times, and having them well stocked in his emergency bag.
  • Game of Thrones: Despite these being The Dung Ages, no one seems to get STDs. Not Queen Cersei, not King Robert, not Tyrion, not Theon, not Shae, not even Ros. The trope is averted in the books at least in passing. A Tyrell camp follower gave a young lord an STI. One of the Targaryen kings allegedly died of an STD from a whore. Also, the prostitute enlisted to teach Dany how to pleasure men is implied to have been living with an STI, and she suffered a flare-up when she was weakened by hunger. Still, none of the main characters ever get any. Season 8 averts it, though, with an extra rather than a real character; one of the prostitutes that Bronn intends to have an orgy with is diagnosed with a venereal disease by Qyburn, who notes she doesn't have much longer to live, much to Bronn's shock.
  • Glee:
    • Puck regularly sleeps around with a lot of women, and he admits to Finn that he never uses condoms, which he admits has only worked out for him 99% of the time.
    • Averted with Artie, who, after having a casual sexual relationship with two different women, finds out he has chlamydia. He's shocked despite the fact that he says he never used condoms because buying them freaked him out.
  • Averted in Gossip Girl (2007): man tramp Chuck Bass has contracted at least a few STDs in his day, and on one occasion bonds with his uncle over what medication they got for gonorrhea.
  • Averted in Grey's Anatomy: the first season finale is about quite a few of the doctors dealing with an outbreak of syphilis from constantly hooking up with one another. This also serves to reveal that some of the characters cheated on their partners.
  • High Fidelity: Averted as Simon caught chlamydia from Ben even though he had no other partners. Ben slept with one other man, however, and got it from him. Simon at least avoids HIV, which is what he'd really worried about.
  • Lampshaded but ultimately left ambiguous with regards to Barney in How I Met Your Mother: other characters often imply that Barney must be crawling with diseases after the number of women he's slept with, but this is never confirmed in canon. In one episode, after a stunt at the Super Bowl causes dozens of girls to call him up for a date, he proudly tells the gang that he's going to sleep with every girl who calls him, but has hired Ranjit as his chauffeur rather than take public transportation, because "Ew, germs!"
  • Averted several times over in How to Get Away with Murder:
    • In one episode, the husband and son of Annalise's client come down with the same venereal disease, since both had had sex with the murder victim.
    • Promiscuous Connor and his nerdy boyfriend Oliver get tested for STDs (at Oliver's insistence). Connor is clean; Oliver has HIV.
  • In Hunter (1984), DeeDee fears that she might've contracted an STD after she's raped by a South American diplomat. Nothing comes of it, fortunately.
  • Dramatically averted in the In the Heat of the Night episode "Rape". The possibility of Althea having been infected with something by her rapist is brought up as the doctor is examining her.
  • Averted in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia; Mac and Dee have contracted STDs during the series. In Mac's case, it's a recurring problem (since he never uses a condom during sex). Dennis has much more sex than both of them, but he doesn't seem to have this problem, presumably because he's smart enough to use a condom. It also helps that Dennis typically sleeps with younger or less sexually active women whenever possible. Dennis's father Frank also never seems to get STDs, though he's (loudly) confirmed that he always carries "magnum condoms for my monster dong".
  • Averted in L.A. Law when Arnold Becker, notorious skirt-chasing divorce attorney, is asked by one of the other lawyers how come he never had problems with venereal diseases and admits that he uses condoms.
  • Averted in one episode of Law & Order, which has a man deliberately infecting women via consensual sex and the prosecution trying to find a way to prosecute him for assault or murder.
  • Averted in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, which deals with sex crimes.
    • Victims are encouraged to get tested — in one particular Tear Jerker episode, the rapist had in fact infected several of his victims.
    • In another episode, a man who was raped complains about the fact that he won't know for sure he doesn't have HIV until after his honeymoon, and he doesn't want to tell his fiancée.
    • In another, Olivia finds out that a former boyfriend was HIV-positive. They'd only slept together once, five years ago, but she still gets tested. Later, they're able to identify said ex's killer because he has the same strain of HIV.
    • In "Scourge", a man went on a killing spree because the brain damage from tertiary-stage syphilis caused him to suffer from religious delusions telling him to kill. His wife is told that she'll have to be tested, but he most likely progressed past the contagious period before he even met her. The detectives eventually go after the life insurance company that didn't bother to inform him or the Centers for Disease Control when they rejected his application.
  • In Law & Order: UK, the murderer of a prostitute turns out to be the wife of one of her customers. What pushed the woman over the edge was the fact that she'd contracted herpes due to her husband's shenanigans and had consequently infected their son, now mentally retarded as a result.
  • Lost Girl: The main character is a succubus, and as such has lots of sex. Even if her male lovers used condoms (this is never confirmed), that wouldn't account for her female ones. However, she feeds during sex and can heal her injuries, so it's possible that if she did contract an STI, she'd heal herself of it at the same time.
  • Loving (1983): As Steffy prepares to seduce Clay, he rebuffs her advances, telling her, "I don't have any condoms". She assures him that she's on the pill, completely disregarding that this would only prevent pregnancy, not disease transmission.
  • Lucifer (2016):
    • Lucifer and Maze both have ridiculous amounts of sex with both male and female partners, but STDs never get brought up. Justified given that they are, respectively, a fallen angel and a demon and have supernatural immunities that keep them safe.
    • Averted by Amenadiel in season three, who catches chlamydia after having sex with a prostitute (he didn't know she was a prostitute at the time) and then has to discuss this with Linda, with whom he's in a relationship when he gets the news. It turns out it was a false alarm, though.
  • One Life to Live: Marty is warned during her rape exam that it's too soon for an HIV test and that she needs to follow up with her private doctor. Luckily, she didn't contract it or any other STD.
  • Port Charles: Joe has a fling with a nurse. A few weeks later, she confides that she's tested positive for HIV. He promptly has to submit to three separate blood tests and wait until the final one comes back negative before sleeping with his new girlfriend. note 
  • In Private Practice, when Charlotte is raped, the possibility of her being infected is brought up (Addison gave her some pills just in case), and she gets tested, but she didn't have anything.
  • Repeatedly averted in the soft-core series Red Shoe Diaries. Characters would often bring out the condoms just before getting it on. The show may be about casual sex, but it's about casual safe sex.
  • Averted in Scrubs:
    • "My Hypocritical Oath" has a man get treated for an STD at the hospital and ask JD not to tell his girlfriend, Kylie, who finds out about it after noticing that her coworker/friend has similar symptoms. Kylie wasn't infected because she and her boyfriend hadn't had sex yet.
    • Dr. Kelso, who frequently cheated on his wife, went to a clinic to be treated for an STD at least once.
    • There was an outbreak of syphilis at a nursing home; two of the patients came from that nursing home and were being treated for it.
  • Inverted on Seinfeld, in the episode "The Burning", where the topic of gonorrhea plays a part in two different plotlines.
    • Jerry's Girl of the Week claimed to have once gotten gonorrhea—from a tractor (at least, that's what her previous boyfriend told her).
    • Kramer is assigned with acting out gonorrhea for medical students at a hospital.
      Kramer: (without any context whatsoever) Well...I got gonorrhea!
      Elaine: That seems about right.
  • The Sex Lives of College Girls: Leighton believed she had this due to only having sex with women, but then catches chlamydia. She's then told that no, having sex with women can infect her too. When she neglects to inform her sex partners as the doctor said to, one of the girls Leighton had given it to tells everyone later while she's seeking to pledge a sorority, embarrassing her publicly.
  • In an episode of Stargate Atlantis, the doctor finds it very odd that the woman from a primitive village whom they have invited back to the base (and have put under a med test) is completely healthy, including a lack of any STDs. It turns out that she's actually an ascended Ancient taking human form, so she's kinda beyond that.
  • The Stargate SG-1 episode "Brief Candle" has an odd aversion: O'Neill has sex with a local woman and is infected with nanites that cause him to age rapidly.
  • Star Trek:
    • Averted in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine with the Section 31 virus afflicting the Changeling race. The virus is spread through linking, the closest Changeling analog to sex. To bring about a Changeling genocide, Section 31 infects an unwitting Odo, who unknowingly infects the Great Link. By season 7, the virus has spread like wildfire through the Great Link, threatening the survival of the species. Before he knew he was infected, Odo also happened to link with Laas, another of the hundred Changelings sent out into the galaxy as infants. Laas left to go find the others and start a new Great Link, possibly dooming them as well, but nobody mentions him after they realize Odo was infected.
    • The franchise is usually big on this trope, what with the Federation's advanced medical technology, but Star Trek: Voyager had an episode where Harry Kim turns out to be the only Starfleet officer to ever pick up a disease by sleeping with the Green-Skinned Space Babe. On top of that, he gets no sympathy from his superiors because he broke protocol with his interspecies liaison with a strange new race (not that it ever stopped Riker or Kirk, but they were senior officers, of course).
  • Averted in the fifth season of Supernatural, as Sam is shown contracting gonorrhea and herpes. It should be noted that none of the STDs are ever acquired due to sex OR due to demonic blood-drinking. In both cases, it was due to Sam aggravating a supernatural entity (a witch and a trickster who's really an Angel) and being cursed. Both of the boys get hit with syphilis (along with scarlet fever and meningitis) by the Horseman Pestilence, although that's just his power instead of them sleeping around. They're cured not long after, though.
  • Averted in Torchwood: Miracle Day. No one can die anymore, and when Jack suggests a condom, his hook-up laughs it off about how no one can die. Of course, Jack, being better versed in the realities of immortality, insists.
    Jack: Forever just got a lot longer.
  • Two and a Half Men: Not only does Charlie not get STDs, but it's commonly pondered why. Of course, in one episode, he goes to the supermarket with Alan and is shown buying large numbers of condoms.
  • Averted in Veronica Mars; it's how Veronica guesses who raped her.
  • Nancy Botwin from Weeds seems to have nothing but spontaneous, public, unprotected sexual encounters, and is none the worse for wear. Amusingly, the one partner she's heavily hinted to be using protection with ends up fathering her child.
  • Without a Trace's Samantha Spade has a one-night stand with a guy whose name she doesn't even remember the next morning. Not once does the possibility of her having caught anything come up, even after she learns that she's pregnant as a result of this and therefore clearly had unprotected sex (at the very least, the condom ripped or slipped) with him.
  • The Young and the Restless: Olivia freaks out upon learning of her husband Nathan's affair, not just because of his infidelity, but because the woman has AIDS, realizing that she herself could be infected as well, but luckily, she isn't. Nathan himself didn't catch it from his lover either.

    Music 

Examples by creator:

  • As a Queercore band founded at the height of the AIDS epidemic, Pansy Division understandably takes a firm stand on this topic.
    • "No Protection" is about refusing to have unprotected sex even when your partner insists on it.
    • "Denny" is about an AIDS victim coping with the results of not having practiced safe sex until it was too late.
  • Frank Zappa referenced gonorrhea and pubic lice ("crabs") frequently in his songs, always in humoristic fashion: "Who Needs the Peace Corps?" (We're Only in It for the Money), "Our Bizarre Relationship" (Uncle Meat), "Road Ladies", "The Clap" (Chunga's Revenge), "Does This Kind of Life Look Interesting To You?" (200 Motels), "Dinah-Moe Humm" (Over-Nite Sensation), "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee?" (Joe's Garage), "In France" (Them or Us), "Attack! Attack! Attack!" (Civilization Phaze III). Less funny is that groupie Lucy Offerall, who played a role in 200 Motels, died of AIDS in 1991.

Examples by title:

  • Slick Rick's track "Indian Girl (An Adult Story) does a twist on this trope at the end of the song. After having spent the entire song trying (and succeeding) to get into an Indian girl's pants, Davy Crockett learns at the end that she had genital crabs... spear-toting, Indian-chanting crabs.
  • The early rap pioneer Kool Moe Dee is considered to be the very first rapper to avert the trope, with two songs from his self-titled album:
    • The opener, "Go See the Doctor":
      Three days later...
      I woke up fussin', yellin' and cussin'
      Drip-drip-drippin' and puss-puss-pussin'
      I went to the bathroom and said
      "Mama mia, Imma
      kill that girl next time I see her!"
    • As well as "Dumb Dick":
      When it came to girls, he didn't care where he went
      He'd hound 'em like a dog, so we used to say "fetch!"
      And it was no tellin' what he would catch
      He was in the doctor's office almost every week
      He became so popular, everybody'd speak
      When he walked in, they'd say (Hi Rick)
      And when he passed by, they'd say (Dumb Dick)
  • Eminem repeatedly averts this in The Slim Shady LP:
    • "Cum On Everybody":
      You thought I was ill and now I'm even more so
      Shit, I got full-blown AIDS and a sore throat
      (...) I told the doc I need a change in sickness
      And gave a girl herpes in exchange for syphilis
    • "I'm Shady":
      So fuck it, I've got herpes while we on the subject (uh-huh)
      And if I told you I had AIDS, y'all would play it
      'Cause you stupid motherfuckers think I'm playin' when I say it
      (...) And I don't have herpes, my dick's just itchin'
      It's not syphilis, and as for being AIDS infested
      I don't know yet, I'm too scared to get tested
    • "Role Model":
      I've been with ten women who got HIV
      Now don't you want to grow up and be just like me?
      I've got genital warts, and it burns when I pee
      Don't you want to grow up to be just like me?

    Tabletop Games 
  • Dungeons & Dragons:
    • In 3rd Edition, paladins are immune to disease by divine blessings, but they tend not to be the type to sleep around. However, Sune, the Goddess of love in Faerun, also promotes paladins, and like other divinely empowered beings, they are expected to promote their goddess's interests. Which admittedly sleeping around would go against (Sune is a goddess of love, not of sex. She's just as open as the edition in question allows about sex being perfectly fine if far from an obligatory part of love).
    • The 4th Edition push of Paladins to any alignment allowed promiscuous paladins of goddesses of hedonism, lust, and similar pursuits, who got a lot of mileage out of their immunity.
  • F.A.T.A.L., despite its heavy emphasis on sexual activity and its claim to be "the most... realistic and historically/mythically accurate role-playing game available", never even mentions STDs.
  • GURPS has the Resistant advantage. It allows one to better resist a variety of hazards and can go up to immunity. "Immunity to disease" is perfectly valid (and if taken with the 0-point feature "sterile", allows one to not have to worry about consequences of sex, well, other than potentially having to deal with a Yandere of either gender). The next step up is "Immunity to metabolic hazards", which means complete immunity to things that would only affect an organic body. It is part of the "Machine" meta-trait, for obvious reasons. Ideas are forming...
  • Pathfinder:
    • The Paladin still is immune to all diseases, but is now joined by the Monk, who gains immunity to disease through mastering his Ki as a class feature (though he gains it two levels later than The Paladin). Both classes use supernatural powers, so they are a case of a Justified Trope. People who are neither paladins nor monks are out of luck, though (as a constantly-active inherent ability, anyway. There are, of course, magic items that grant the same resistance when you wear them).
    • If a character of any class ascends into Mythic status - Pathfinder's alternative to D&D's epic levels - there is a universal mythic ability one can get that grants them immunity to all non-mythic diseases & poisons.

    Video Games 
  • Averted in Crusader Kings II, which has traits for herpes and syphilis.
  • As A Dance with Rogues is based on Dungeons & Dragons, paladins are immune to disease. Unlike in D&D, paladins in the Neverwinter Nights engine don't lose their powers if they lose their alignment, so a Princess who takes a level of Paladin early on can screw whoever and whatever she likes with no risk of disease, regardless of where her alignment will go. (As this is a game about thieves and thieving, maintaining a Lawful Good alignment is very difficult.)
  • Subverted in Dragon Age II, in which the absurdly promiscuous Isabela apparently gets STDs often, but she knows a long-suffering mage called Anders who can get rid of them with no real difficulty. One NPC even claims she's so promiscuous that there's an STD named after her. And... yes, she's a potential love interest for the main character.
  • Averted in Elona: encounters with prostitutes always leave you temporarily insane and have a chance to give you the "sick" status.
  • Averted in Fable II, having unsafe sex can cause your character to get an STD. This is mostly played for laughs, though, as STDs don't actually do anything.
  • Fallout: New Vegas for the player, who can sleep with several women (and men, and a robot) in the game with no consequence at all. That being said, Benny (the Act 1 antagonist) will mention not wanting another "social disease".
  • Averted in HunieCam Studio: sending girls to work as escorts has the possibility of them getting various STDs that can cause various debilitating statuses, some of which are incurable. They can even end up contracting AIDS, which is both incurable and prevents them from doing anything unless hopped up on steroids.
  • Inverted in Leisure Suit Larry 1: In the Land of the Lounge Lizards: having sex with a prostitute without wearing a condom will comedically kill you only a few minutes later!
  • The Sims series has pre-made characters who are supposedly promiscuous, and promiscuity is actually a lifetime goal for some Sims, but none suffer for it since such diseases don't exist in the world. This, however, can be changed with mods.
  • The universe of The Spellcasting Series is STD-free. The narrator takes care to mention that fact, as Ernie Eaglebeak tends to shag every woman he can get his hands on.
  • Averted in Wasteland: sleeping with a hooker will always give the character "wasteland herpes". This does affect the character's health, though it can be easily cured at any hospital. Also noteworthy is that this is one of only six diseased/poisoned status afflictions in the entire game.
  • The Witcher has a literal example: a Witcher's mutations render them immune to disease and cause sterility. Geralt makes good use of both.

    Visual Novels 
  • Averted in Being a ΔΙΚ. Arieth has crabs, which is a problem for most of the male cast as she Really Gets Around; it is therefore easy to know who has slept with her. Played straight with the main character (who is notably the only major male character Arieth cannot have sex with), who engages in unprotected sex throughout the game (despite Neil's admonishment at the start of the game) and does not contract any STDs. Notably, in Tremolo's case, this is actually confirmed: on Jill's route in Episode 9, she insists that the MC get tested for STDs in exchange for her starting birth control, and, despite having potentially slept with over a dozen women without protection by this point, he always tests negative.
  • None of the characters in Daughter for Dessert catch any STDs despite the amount of sex (all unprotected) that they all have.
  • In Double Homework, everyone except Dennis has sex, and a couple of characters are pretty experienced, but STDs are nonexistent among these characters.
  • Downplayed in Melody. Even though mostly the characters don't use protection, most of them have little to no sexual experience (at least not recently). And Becca at least insists that the protagonist wear a condom for their first time together, though they don't use any protection after that.
  • Justified in Nukitashi. The SHO regularly carries out medical checkups on everyone on the island and punishes those who skip them. No one has to worry about diseases, no matter how much unprotected sex they have.
  • Makoto Itou of School Days. Considering how often he gets around and his inconsistency with using protection, especially in the anime adaptation, it's a wonder he hasn't come down with at least one of these. Also, considering that his mother is a nurse, it's a wonder that he hasn't even thought of getting himself tested, nor has she made him get tested... and that's not getting into how filthy his father should be.

    Webcomics 
  • Girls with Slingshots:
    • Angel thinks you can only get an STD from contact between a penis and a vagina, which is convenient for her since she's apparently been banging every female who asks for the last ten years. Thea, a similarly inclined woman who was similarly inclining Angel until recently and has caught restless leg syndrome, is understandably flabbergasted at Angel's delusion. Later, Angel does catch what is implied to be herpes or warts, as she shamefully reveals the damage by flashing Thea from off-panel.
    • Later, Thea's new girlfriend Mimi is explaining gloves and dental dams to Hazel, who is shocked to realize that fingering and oral sex are not just an STD risk for lesbians. Hazel, while straight, is also no stranger to casual sex, and the Alt Text for the comic is that she should have caught something years ago with how little protection she was using.
  • Grrl Power: Dabbler mentions that she and her fellow Succubi are immune to most diseases, including STDs.
  • Teahouse is set in a brothel, no protection is ever seen, and there's no comment on STDs.
  • Subverted in Times Like This: Cassie gets gonorrhea and herpes from fooling around in the disco era, but since We Will Have Perfect Health in the Future, she can go to 2205 and easily get medicine that cures both in a matter of hours.

    Web Originals 
  • Subverted in Camp Camp: Quartermaster and his Quarter-sister don't have to worry about getting any STDs... because they both have all of them. There are no new ones for them to get.
    Quarter-sister: They named one after me.
    Quartermaster: Pfft. One.
  • Justified in Chakona Space. Chakats have genetically enhanced immune systems and well-defined estrus cycles, so despite their habitual Polyamory they never catch anything and rarely get pregnant by accident (as opposed to on purpose). Sometimes, on the rare occasion that a chakat is in heat and doesn't want kids, a brief mention of wearing protection is added.
  • Channel Awesome: Subverted by Ask That Guy with the Glasses and later on The Nostalgia Critic. Both are Mr Fanservices with active and messy sex lives, both have suffered the effects.
  • Justified in The Journal Entries — Pendorians don't need to worry about STDs (or diseases in general, period) overmuch because they owe their extended lifespans to helpful medical nanotech inside their bodies in the first place, and unwanted pregnancy likewise isn't usually a concern for them. The emphasis is still on not getting too reckless (especially in BDSM or otherwise 'risky' play), and safety concerns are explicitly brought up and addressed every so often.

    Western Animation 
  • An aversion in American Dad!; a few episodes have implied that Hayley has herpes. And apparently has given them to Jeff.
  • Somewhat averted in Archer; the cast has sex with each other and total strangers regularly, but we never actually see them dealing with a caught STD on camera. But the show often mentions in dialog that the title character has contracted diseases multiple times from his rampant sex life, and has had the clap so many times it's more like the applause. When his mother mentions he contracted an extremely aggressive disease that "was like nothing the doctors had ever seen before", most of the show's female cast were worried they might've picked it up from sleeping with him.
    Mallory: Trust me, if you had it, you'd know.
  • Family Guy:
    • Subverted by Quagmire, who is apparently the venereal disease equivalent of Mr. Burns in that he carries every STD known to man but shows no symptoms (as his diseases are so balanced with each other, a slight imbalance could kill him). In fact, the only sexually transmitted disease he doesn't have is an unnamed disease from an African insect that Peter personally flew out and tried to find.
      Joe: [after stabbing a hypodermic needle into Quagmire's arm] Gotcha!
      Peter: Ha! Hepatitis C!
      Quagmire: Joke's on you, I already got it!
      [Peter stabs Quagmire with another needle]
      Peter: Meningitis!
      Quagmire: I'm a carrier!
      [Joe stabs him with a third needle]
      Joe: Gonorrhea!
      Quagmire: Patient zero. You're gonna have to do better than that!
      [Fast forward to several other needles stuck on to Quagmire]
      Peter: I dunno, Joe, that's it. We're out of known diseases. Unless... [flies all the way to Africa to catch a mosquito in a jar] Alright, what this is has no name, so you can't have it.
      [Peter lets the mosquito go and it bites Quagmire on the cheek, making his face swell up and turn red and his eyes bleed]
    • The series also parodies this with Fonzie's sex life.
      Peter: Hey, Fonz... You were with all those women... You ever get a sexual disease?
      Fonzie: ...Herpes twice. And the clap.
    • Averted and played for laughs in "Road to the Multiverse", in which Quagmire contracts AIDS...but since he's in a universe where Christianity never existed and science is far more advanced than the main timeline, curing it is as simple as taking a pill.
      "Oh, I got AIDS again. Better take my NyQuil Cold, Flu, and AIDS. [takes pill] All gone!"
  • In Undergrads, Dumb Blonde Cal sleeps with a new, unnamed woman practically every episode, and STDs are never a problem for him despite him admitting his irresponsible practices:
    Cal: [reading a pamphlet from the free clinic] What does "pro-mis-cu-ous" mean?
    Nitz: People who sleep with lots of people, Cal.
    Cal: Oh phew, guy. Good thing I never sleep with any of my lady friends! We just play a little game I like to call "unprotected sex".


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