With no explanation, label text_A→text_B with either "DON'T KNOW", "NO" or "YES".
text_A: Six months before the 1988 Olympics, Louganis was diagnosed with HIV, and started antiretrovirals. At the time, people with HIV/AIDS faced great stigma often losing their jobs, being denied housing, and being ostracized. Years later, in 1995, Louganis came out publicly as HIV+. After some of his blood washed into the pool after he suffered a head injury at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, Louganis reported that he was "paralyzed with fear" about someone else catching the virus from exposure, but this did not happen to anyone. The incident posed no risk to others as any blood was fully diluted by the pool water, and according to John Ward, chief of HIV-AIDS surveillance at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "chlorine kills HIV". Since skin is an effective barrier to HIV, the only way the virus could enter would be through an open wound; "If the virus just touches the skin, it is unheard of for it to cause infection: the skin has no receptors to bind HIV," explained Anthony Fauci.
text_B: Knowing that the Olympic villages have a long reputation of being hotbeds of sexual activity among young athletes, does this passage suggest that such escapades had tragic consequences for a few competitors in 1988?
NO.