Dr Google, porn and friend-of-a-friend: where are young men really getting their sexual health information?

Sexual Health
Amy LitrasMeredith Temple-Smith

Abstract

Background Young men are vulnerable when it comes to sexual health. They attend the general practitioner (GP) less often than females and are less likely to be offered testing for sexually transmissible infections. Access to accurate health information and education is a cornerstone of primary prevention, yet we know very little about how, where and why young people obtain information about sexual health. One-on-one semi-structured interviews were conducted with 35 male students aged 16-19 years from two Victorian educational institutions for trade skills until data saturation was reached. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. The young men were poorly informed about sexual health. Their existing knowledge mainly came from school-based sexual health education, which while valued, was generally poorly recalled and provided only a narrow scope of physiological information. Young men seek sexual health information from various sources including family, the Internet, friends and pornography, with information from the latter three sources perceived as unreliable. GPs were seen as a source of trust-worthy information but were not accessed for this purpose due to embarrassment. Young men preferred the ...Continue Reading

References

Jun 2, 1997·The Medical Journal of Australia·J S HumphreysH C Weinand
Aug 1, 1997·The Australian Journal of Rural Health·D Warr, L Hillier
Nov 13, 2001·The Australian Journal of Rural Health·L Bourke
Jan 18, 2005·Social Science & Medicine·Nicola J GrayJudith A Cantrill
Jul 26, 2008·Sexually Transmitted Infections·K M McNameeJ S Hocking
Apr 2, 2009·The Australian Journal of Rural Health·Lisa BourkeFiona Lukaitis
Mar 9, 2011·The Medical Journal of Australia·Fabian Y S KongMargaret E Hellard

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Citations

Jan 18, 2019·Journal of Clinical Medicine·Rubén de AlarcónAngel L Montejo
Jul 26, 2017·Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz·Nicola Döring

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