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Title: Knowledge of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases among women attending a family planning clinic in Nairobi, Kenya.

Authors: Garland, M; Maggwa, B N; Mati, J K; Kihoro, J; Mbugua, S; Achola, P; Hunter, D J

Published In Am J Prev Med, (1993 Jan-Feb)

Abstract: We interviewed 1,716 women attending a family planning clinic in Nairobi between January 1990 and May 1991 about their knowledge of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). When participants in the study were asked to name spontaneously the STDs they knew, more than 90% of the women named gonorrhea and AIDS, and 75.0% named syphilis; 65.4% could name two or more signs of AIDS; and 96.9%, 66.5%, and 58.3% mentioned sexual transmission, transmission via blood transfusion, and perinatal transmission, respectively, as routes of transmission of AIDS. Knowledge of most symptoms and routes of transmission of AIDS, as well as knowledge of gonorrhea and syphilis, was significantly positively associated with level of education. Unmarried women were significantly less likely to know symptoms and routes of transmission of AIDS than were married women. Level of knowledge of gonorrhea and syphilis was significantly positively associated with number of lifetime sexual partners. Although awareness of AIDS was very high, detailed knowledge of signs of AIDS and routes of transmission was deficient, particularly among less educated women. This positive association of detailed AIDS knowledge with level of education suggests a need to design AIDS prevention activities that are more accessible to, and better understood by, women who have little education.

PubMed ID: 8439431 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/psychology*; Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/transmission; Adolescent; Adult; Community Health Centers; Family Planning Services; Female; Gonorrhea/psychology; Gonorrhea/transmission; Health Education*; Humans; Kenya; Sexually Transmitted Diseases/psychology*; Sexually Transmitted Diseases/transmission; Syphilis/psychology; Syphilis/transmission

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