The European Journal of Public Health Advance Access originally published online on March 8, 2006
The European Journal of Public Health 2006 16(5):498-504; doi:10.1093/eurpub/ckl024
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Health-related behaviours |
Third Italian national survey on knowledge, attitudes, and sexual behaviour in relation to HIV/AIDS risk and the role of health education campaigns
Carlo Signorelli1, Cesira Pasquarella1, Rosa Maria Limina2, Edoardo Colzani1, Mila Fanti1, Antonia Cielo1, Massimo Greco3, Chiara Porro de' Somenzi4, Maria Chironna5 and Michele Quarto5
1 Department of Public HealthHygiene Section, University of Parma, Parma, Italy
2 Department of Experimental and Applied MedicineHygiene Section, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy
3 Local Health Authority n.2 of Perugia, Italy
4 Local Health Authority City of Milan, Italy
5 Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, Hygiene Section, University of Bari, Bari, Italy
Correspondence: Carlo Signorelli, Department of Public HealthHygiene Section, Via Volturno 39, 43100 Parma, Italy, tel: +39 0521 903831, fax: +39 0521 903832, e-mail: carlo.signorelli{at}unipr.it
Aim: The survey, supported by the National Health Institute (ISS), investigates on sources of information for HIV/AIDS and sexual behaviour of the Italian general population. Methods: The survey was carried out in four different Italian provinces with different geographical, social, and epidemiological patterns of HIV/AIDS: Bari, Milan, Parma, and Perugia. A self-administered questionnaire was used to interview a sample of 2000 people, aged 1849 years, chosen using a quota-sampling, considering age, sex, and level of education. Results: A total of 1985 persons filled in the questionnaire. Among them, 73.2% reported Ministry of Health as their main source of information and 76.7% TV/radio advertising as their main means of information. Sexually active subjects, experiencing occasional sexual intercourse, were 22.4%; of them 34.6% did not refer a systematic use of condom. Among sexually active people, half (45.7%) reported as irrelevant their risk of infection, 6.9% as high. Being male (OR = 6.175) and having the first sexual intercourse before 18 years (OR = 2.076) were significantly associated with sexual behaviour at risk (males having unsafe sexual intercourses with prostitutes or during partners' menstrual period; both sexes having unsafe occasional sexual intercourses or anal sex), while living in Northern Italy (OR = 0.672) was significantly protective. Subjects with sexual behaviour at risk were about 40%. Conclusions: The need for further education campaigns, and their consequent evaluations, is relevant. Monitoring sexual behaviour of general population, focusing on risk behaviour rather than risk groups, is fundamental nowadays in preventing HIV.
Keywords: AIDS, attitudes, knowledge, sexual behaviour, survey
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