Impact Data - School Health Education

School Health Education is a sexuality education programme based on social learning theory. The programme intends to change basic attitudes about sexual intercourse and to encourage safer sexual behaviours, delays in the initiation of sexual intercourse and, among sexually experienced youth, reductions in the number of their sex partners. The programme relies on existing structures, including a full-time health educator and health professionals. A local steering committee oversees the involvement and training of local leaders and heads of schools as well as of parents, teachers, and senior tutors.
The African Medical and Research Foundation, in conjunction with the Soroti School District Administration, implemented this intensified school health education programme in primary schools in a rural county (Kalaki) and the municipality of Soroti in northeastern Uganda between 1994 and 1996. Kaberamaido country was the comparison area, where students were exposed to the standard school health and HIV/AIDS education programme of Uganda. A survey of youth regarding their sexual health knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours informed the design of the programme, provided baseline data for evaluation, and offered a means of informing local leaders and students about the magnitude of risk for HIV faced by students in this area of Uganda.
Among sexually experienced youth in 1994, youth at intervention schools reported an average of 2.2 sex partners; by 1996, this number had fallen to an average of 1.4 sex partners. By contrast, reported numbers of sex partners among sexually experienced youth in comparison schools were 2.1 in 1994 and 2.0 in 1996. The difference was statistically significant. (Note: At baseline, the youth from intervention schools were 3.7 times more likely to be sexually active than those from comparison schools (43% versus 26%, respectively). The youth from rural intervention schools were also 3.7 times more likely to have had sex than youth from comparison schools.)
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