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Autor_in
Rosen, Frederik Tilmann von
Rosen, Antonella Juline von
Müller-Riemenschneider, Falk
Damberg, Inken
Tinnemann, Peter
Titel der Zeitschrift
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Erscheinungsjahr
2018
Jahrgang/Bandnummer
15
Heftnummer
1
Seitenangabe
110
Sprache
englisch
Abstract
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) pose a significant threat to individual and public health. They disproportionately affect adolescents and young adults. In a cross-sectional study, we assessed self-rated and factual STI knowledge in a sample of 9th graders in 13 secondary schools in Berlin, Germany. Differences by age, gender, migrant background, and school type were quantified using bivariate and multivariable analyses. A total of 1177 students in 61 classes participated. The mean age was 14.6 (SD = 0.7), 47.5% were female, and 52.9% had at least one immigrant parent. Knowledge of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was widespread, but other STIs were less known. For example, 46.2% had never heard of chlamydia, 10.8% knew of the HPV vaccination, and only 2.2% were aware that no cure exists for HPV infection. While boys were more likely to describe their knowledge as good, there was no general gender superiority in factual knowledge. Children of immigrants and students in the least academic schools had lower knowledge overall. Our results show that despite their particular risk to contract an STI, adolescents suffer from suboptimal levels of knowledge on STIs beyond HIV. Urgent efforts needed to improve adolescent STI knowledge in order to improve the uptake of primary and secondary prevention.
Schlagwort
Krankheit
Sexualität
Jugend
Wissen
Sexualität
Jugend
Wissen
Publikationstyp
Zeitschriftenartikel
Dateien in dieser Publikation
Dateien
Beschreibung
Größe
Format