Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan

  Background: The control of spread of HIV takes concerted efforts at both national and international levels. Education is an important component of preventing the spread of HIV. This study aimed to assess the attitudes of parents, teachers and students towards informing children about HIV/AIDS, a...

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Main Authors: Fathieh ABU MOGHLI, Suhair AL HABEESH, Lubna ABU SHIKHA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2017-03-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijph.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijph/article/view/9381
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spelling doaj-d0b9df8e8f7d4a0ebbe75d40b1be0c7b2021-01-02T14:57:39ZengTehran University of Medical SciencesIranian Journal of Public Health2251-60852251-60932017-03-01463Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in JordanFathieh ABU MOGHLI0Suhair AL HABEESH1Lubna ABU SHIKHA2Dept. of Community Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, University of Jordan, Amman, JordanDept. of Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Al-Zaytoonah University of Jordan, Amman, JordanDept. of Maternal and Child Health, Faculty of Nursing, University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan   Background: The control of spread of HIV takes concerted efforts at both national and international levels. Education is an important component of preventing the spread of HIV. This study aimed to assess the attitudes of parents, teachers and students towards informing children about HIV/AIDS, attitudes concerning 'proper' age to learn about HIV/AIDS, possible differences in attitudes relating to gender of child and what they should learn and ideas about the most 'adequate' person/institution to be responsible for provision of HIV/AIDS education. Methods: This study was conducted in Amman, Jordan in April 2015. Descriptive correlational design was used; a sample of school students, university students, school teachers and parents, a stratified random sample was used. Data was collected by using a questionnaire. Results: All groups asserted the importance of HIV/AIDS education and awareness rising for all. 62.0% of respondents thought that school was the main source of information. About 82% of respondents believed that HIV/AIDS education should be integrated into different disciplines of school curricula, 84% of respondents believed that HIV/AIDS education should be part of university curricula. Nobody believed that HIV/AIDS education should be restricted to boys only. Conclusion: As HIV/AIDS is a scary matter to all, stigmatization and shame may be behind potentially bigger numbers of infected or ill people who do not come forward for treatment or care. Attitudes of their kin care providers need to be addressed as well as those of the official health care providers.     https://ijph.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijph/article/view/9381HIV/AIDS educationAttitudesStudentsJordan
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fathieh ABU MOGHLI
Suhair AL HABEESH
Lubna ABU SHIKHA
spellingShingle Fathieh ABU MOGHLI
Suhair AL HABEESH
Lubna ABU SHIKHA
Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
Iranian Journal of Public Health
HIV/AIDS education
Attitudes
Students
Jordan
author_facet Fathieh ABU MOGHLI
Suhair AL HABEESH
Lubna ABU SHIKHA
author_sort Fathieh ABU MOGHLI
title Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
title_short Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
title_full Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
title_fullStr Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
title_full_unstemmed Perception of HIV/AIDS Education at the Community Level in Jordan
title_sort perception of hiv/aids education at the community level in jordan
publisher Tehran University of Medical Sciences
series Iranian Journal of Public Health
issn 2251-6085
2251-6093
publishDate 2017-03-01
description   Background: The control of spread of HIV takes concerted efforts at both national and international levels. Education is an important component of preventing the spread of HIV. This study aimed to assess the attitudes of parents, teachers and students towards informing children about HIV/AIDS, attitudes concerning 'proper' age to learn about HIV/AIDS, possible differences in attitudes relating to gender of child and what they should learn and ideas about the most 'adequate' person/institution to be responsible for provision of HIV/AIDS education. Methods: This study was conducted in Amman, Jordan in April 2015. Descriptive correlational design was used; a sample of school students, university students, school teachers and parents, a stratified random sample was used. Data was collected by using a questionnaire. Results: All groups asserted the importance of HIV/AIDS education and awareness rising for all. 62.0% of respondents thought that school was the main source of information. About 82% of respondents believed that HIV/AIDS education should be integrated into different disciplines of school curricula, 84% of respondents believed that HIV/AIDS education should be part of university curricula. Nobody believed that HIV/AIDS education should be restricted to boys only. Conclusion: As HIV/AIDS is a scary matter to all, stigmatization and shame may be behind potentially bigger numbers of infected or ill people who do not come forward for treatment or care. Attitudes of their kin care providers need to be addressed as well as those of the official health care providers.    
topic HIV/AIDS education
Attitudes
Students
Jordan
url https://ijph.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijph/article/view/9381
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AT suhairalhabeesh perceptionofhivaidseducationatthecommunitylevelinjordan
AT lubnaabushikha perceptionofhivaidseducationatthecommunitylevelinjordan
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