Use of Condom and Knowledge of Own HIV Status among Undergraduates of Ten Tertiary Schools in Ekiti and Ondo States Southwest, Nigeria

Daramol, G. O. and Edogun, H. A. and Ojerinde, A. O. and Agbaje, A. A. and Ogunfolakan, O. O. and Ajala, O. O. and Egbebi, A. and . Akerele, E. F (2019) Use of Condom and Knowledge of Own HIV Status among Undergraduates of Ten Tertiary Schools in Ekiti and Ondo States Southwest, Nigeria. In: Theory and Applications of Microbiology and Biotechnology Vol. 2. B P International, pp. 143-151. ISBN 978-93-89562-79-8

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Abstract

Bearing a burden of 66.7% of all global cases, HIV infection has become a major health challenge in
Africa in general and sub-Sahara Africa in particular. For this reason, the battle to halt HIV/AIDS’
spread in Africa, particularly in Nigeria is being fought on different fronts, carefully considering all
factors that can help bring down prevalence rate and curb the spread of the disease. Two of such
fronts are advocacies for the consistent and right use of a condom, as well as voluntary testing to
know own HIV status. In this study, 100 undergraduates each were sampled consecutively from ten
tertiary schools in Ekiti and Ondo States of Nigeria, so as to evaluate the level of use of condom and
knowledge of own HIV status among this group of youths and young adults. The study was conducted
through the use of self-administered questionnaires among the enrolled undergraduates. The 1000
subjects comprised 421(42.1%) males and 57.1 (57.1%) females, while 8 (0.8%) did not disclose their
gender. Five hundred and twenty-one (52.1%) of the subjects fell within the 21-30 age-bracket, 407
(40.7%) were 20years and below, 22 (2.2%) were within the 31-40 age-bracket, while 12(1.2%) were
40years and above. Thirty-eight (3.8%) did not disclose their age-bracket. Two hundred and four
(20.4%) of the subjects always used condom, 169 (16.9%) used it occasionally, 139 (13.9%) never
used during sexual intercourse, 403(40.3%) indicated that the use of condom wasn’t applicable to
them (this group was presumed to be sexually inactive/inert), while 85 (8.5%) didn’t volunteer
information about their sexual activity. Findings also revealed that majority, 564(56.4%) of the subjects
did not know their HIV status, 51(5.1%) were indifferent about their HIV status, 25 (2.5%) did not
disclose if they knew their HIV status or not. However, 360 (36%) knew their HIV status. With more
than half of the study population not knowing their HIV status, it is therefore suggested that health
policy-makers should scale-up advocacy activities to persuade the general populace in Nigeria to go
for voluntary testing.

Item Type: Book Section
Subjects: Pustaka Library > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@pustakalibrary.com
Date Deposited: 20 Nov 2023 05:22
Last Modified: 20 Nov 2023 05:22
URI: http://archive.bionaturalists.in/id/eprint/1895

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