Department of Physiotherapy, School of Health Care Sciences, Faculty of Health Care, University of Pretoria, P.O. Box 667, Pretoria, South Africa, 0001.
Department of Radiography, School of Health Care Sciences, Faculty of Health Care, University of Pretoria, P.O. Box 667, Pretoria, South Africa, 0001.
Afr Health Sci. 2020 Mar;20(1):28-38. doi: 10.4314/ahs.v20i1.6.
Premature sexual activity has become a norm in South African society, often resulting in teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (STD). Occurrence of premature sexual activity is related to insufficient education, gender inequalities, household poverty and place of residence. The Stepping Stones project uses a 10-session programme to educate learners about relationships, HIV-prevention and teenage pregnancy. The purpose was to measure and describe learners' sexual knowledge and activities in a rural technical secondary school in North-west Province, South Africa.
A cross-sectional survey. Questionnaires were distributed to learners in grade 8 to 12. Descriptive statistics was used in analysis.
Seventy-nine questionnaires were analysed. Despite a young sample, 26.6% were sexually active and 24.1% engaged in sexual activity. The mean age for first-time sexual intercourse was 15.2±2.3 years. The use of contraceptives was low (41.2%) and participants reported difficulty in talking to partners about condom use (54.8%). Almost half (45.5%) of the participants had never heard of STDs. Participants expressed a need to use social media as a sex education tool (12.3%). The primary source of information was from school-based programmes (58.0%).
Findings point to unsafe sexual practice of learners at a school in rural South Africa, even from an early age. This concern is accompanied by the occurrence of low levels of sexually-related knowledge. The learners would benefit from continued implementation of the Stepping Stones programme. Implementation could be improved by incorporating social media and emphasising gender equality and negotiation skills in sexually vulnerable situations.
在南非社会,过早的性行为已经成为一种常态,这通常导致青少年怀孕和性传播疾病(STD)的发生。过早的性行为发生与教育不足、性别不平等、家庭贫困和居住地点有关。Stepping Stones 项目使用 10 个课程方案,教育学习者关于人际关系、艾滋病毒预防和青少年怀孕的知识。本研究旨在衡量和描述南非西北部农村技术中学的学习者的性知识和性活动。
采用横断面调查。向 8 到 12 年级的学习者发放问卷。采用描述性统计进行分析。
分析了 79 份问卷。尽管样本年龄较小,但仍有 26.6%的人有过性行为,24.1%的人有过性行为。首次性行为的平均年龄为 15.2±2.3 岁。避孕药具使用率较低(41.2%),参与者报告说很难与伴侣讨论使用避孕套的问题(54.8%)。近一半(45.5%)的参与者从未听说过性传播疾病。参与者表示需要使用社交媒体作为性教育工具(12.3%)。信息的主要来源是学校的项目(58.0%)。
研究结果表明,南非农村一所学校的学习者存在不安全的性行为,即使在很小的时候就已经如此。这种情况伴随着性知识水平低的发生。学习者将受益于继续实施 Stepping Stones 项目。实施可以通过纳入社交媒体和强调性别平等以及在性脆弱的情况下的谈判技巧来得到改善。