Lou Chao-hua, Zhao Quan, Gao Er-Sheng, Shah Iqbal H
Department of Epidemiology and Social Science on Reproductive Health, Shanghai Institute of Planned Parenthood Research, Shanghai, China.
J Adolesc Health. 2006 Nov;39(5):720-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2006.04.003. Epub 2006 Jul 10.
To assess the feasibility and effectiveness of sex education conducted through the Internet.
Two high schools and four colleges of a university in Shanghai were selected as the research sites. Half of these were assigned to the intervention group and the other half to the control group. The interventions consisted of offering sexual and reproductive health knowledge, service information, counseling and discussion to all grade one students in the intervention group. The intervention phase lasted for 10 months and was implemented through a special website, with web pages, online videos, Bulletin Board System (BBS) and expert mailbox. In total, 624 students from the intervention, and 713 from the control schools and colleges participated in the baseline survey, and about 97% of them were followed up in postintervention survey to assess changes that can be attributed to the sex education interventions provided through the Internet.
The median scores of the overall knowledge and of each specific aspect of reproductive health such as reproduction, contraception, condom, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) were significantly higher in the intervention group as compared with those in the control group at postintervention (p < .0001), although no significant differences were found between these two groups in the baseline survey (p > .05). Group by time interaction effects in ordinal logistic regression analysis were found on knowledge score (p < .0001) and in attitude of high school students toward sex-related issues (p < .05), suggesting that interventions increased subjects' knowledge significantly and changed high school students' attitudes to being less liberal toward sex. The intervention also had positive influence on students' attitudes toward providing contraceptive service for unmarried people.
Providing sex education to students in Shanghai through the Internet was found feasible and effective. The Internet-based sex education program increased students' reproductive health knowledge effectively and changed their attitudes toward sex-related issues in terms of being less liberal toward sex and more favorable to providing services to unmarried young people. The Internet thus offers an important and hitherto untapped potential for providing sex education to students and young people in China.
评估通过互联网开展性教育的可行性和有效性。
选取上海一所大学的两所高中和四所学院作为研究地点。将这些学校分为两组,一半分配到干预组,另一半分配到对照组。干预措施包括为干预组的所有一年级学生提供性与生殖健康知识、服务信息、咨询和讨论。干预阶段持续10个月,通过一个专门的网站实施,该网站有网页、在线视频、公告栏系统(BBS)和专家邮箱。共有624名来自干预组的学生以及713名来自对照学校和学院的学生参与了基线调查,其中约97%的学生在干预后调查中接受了随访,以评估可归因于通过互联网提供的性教育干预措施的变化。
干预后,干预组在生殖健康总体知识以及生殖、避孕、避孕套、性传播感染(STIs)和人类免疫缺陷病毒/获得性免疫缺陷综合征(HIV/AIDS)等生殖健康各个具体方面的中位数得分显著高于对照组(p <.0001),尽管在基线调查中两组之间未发现显著差异(p >.05)。在有序逻辑回归分析中发现,组间时间交互效应在知识得分方面(p <.0001)以及高中生对性相关问题的态度方面(p <.05)均有体现,这表明干预显著增加了受试者的知识,并改变了高中生对性的态度,使其不再那么开放。该干预对学生对为未婚者提供避孕服务的态度也有积极影响。
发现通过互联网为上海的学生提供性教育是可行且有效的。基于互联网的性教育项目有效地增加了学生的生殖健康知识,并在对性不再那么开放以及更倾向于为未婚年轻人提供服务方面改变了他们对性相关问题的态度。因此,互联网为在中国向学生和年轻人提供性教育提供了一个重要且尚未开发的潜力。