性教育和性传播疾病宿命论,年轻非裔美国男性与女性发生性行为的检测和感染。

IF 1.4 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Sex Education-Sexuality Society and Learning Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-09-09 DOI:10.1080/14681811.2020.1809369
Megan Clare Craig-Kuhn, Norine Schmidt, Alyssa Lederer, Gérard Gomes, Shannon Watson, Glenis Scott, David H Martin, Patricia Kissinger
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本研究的目的是研究15-24岁的非裔美国男性与女性发生性行为的性教育与性传播感染(STI)率、性传播感染宿命论和先前的性传播感染检测之间的关系。参与者在社区场所接受了衣原体和淋病检测,并进行了一项调查,以获取性教育和性健康信息的历史。在1196名受访者中,73.0%表示曾接受机构提供的性教育,包括性传播疾病资讯(90.5%)、避孕套(89.2%)、怀孕/生育(72.1%)及计划生育(67.1%)。在被问及性教育质量的一部分参与者中,85.7%的人认为“非常好”或“还行”。衣原体和/或淋病患病率为10.5%。接受过性教育的人更有可能降低性传播感染的宿命(51.0%比42.4%,p=0.01),更有可能报告以前的衣原体筛查(44.1%比31.6%,p=0.01)
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Sex education and STI fatalism, testing and infection among young African American men who have sex with women.

The purpose of this study was to examine the association between institution-delivered sex education given under real-world conditions and sexually transmitted infection (STI) rates, STI fatalism, and prior STI testing among African American men aged 15-24 who have sex with women. Participants were tested at community venues for Chlamydia and gonorrhoea and undertook a survey to elicit history of sex education and sexual health information. Among 1196 participants, 73.0% reported having received institution-delivered sex education topics including STI information (90.5%), condoms (89.2%), pregnancy/birth (72.1%) and birth control (67.1%). Among a subset of participants asked about the quality of sex education, 85.7% reported it was 'very good' or 'OK'. Prevalence rate for Chlamydia and/or gonorrhoea was 10.5%. Those who received sex education were more likely to have lower STI fatalism (51.0% vs. 42.4%, p=0.01) and more likely to report previous Chlamydia screening (44.1% vs. 31.6%, p<0.01), but did not have a significantly lower rate of Chlamydia and/or gonorrhoea (9.9% vs. 12.4%, p=0.20) compared to those who did not receive sex education. These findings suggest that institution-delivered sex education given under real-world conditions has beneficial effects on STI risk factors among young African American men.

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CiteScore
4.00
自引率
10.50%
发文量
57
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