Aim: This study
was conducted to assess the knowledge of HIV among engineering college students
and their attitude toward people living with HIV.
Introduction: The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a
serious worldwide public health issue that arises from a retrovirus that
infects immune system cells in humans, either killing or severely weakening
them. The patient exhibits no symptoms in the early stages of the infection.
HIV can spread through unprotected sexual contact, contaminated needle
exchanges, contaminated blood transfusions, and mother-child transmission. In
2022, globally, 39 million people are living with HIV and 630000 people died
from HIV-related causes. The total number of people living with HIV in India is
estimated at 24.01 lakh people in 2021.
Materials and Methods:
A cross-sectional study was done among college students from engineering
colleges in Pondicherry from April 2018 to September 2018. The selection of
study subjects was done using simple random sampling. After getting informed
consent from the individuals a pre-tested, semi-structured questionnaire was administered.
Data were entered and analysed using Microsoft Excel spreadsheets. Descriptive
statistics were used and results were expressed as proportions.
Results: The
majority of the students, about 92.4% had heard about HIV/AIDS, and about 92.4%
of the participants were aware that HIV can spread through body fluids such as
blood, sexual contact, and urine. More than half 52.7% of students are aware
that migrant workers, lorry drivers, and commercial sex workers are high-risk
groups for HIV/AIDS. 68.8% of students don’t know their HIV status. 65.2% were
not willing to isolate HIV-infected people from society. Regarding the attitude
toward people living with HIV, the results of this study, are still
discriminatory. The majority of the students were willing to accept and support
the HIV patient, but this was not adequate and still, some stigma persists.
Conclusion: More
health education and campaigns to raise student knowledge of HIV/AIDS are
urgently needed. The Ministry of Education discovered more effective ways to
disseminate the required knowledge on HIV/AIDS via the Internet, social media,
mobile apps, hotlines, booklets, and printed instructional materials.
Author(s)details:-
V. Pragadeesh Raja
Shri Sathya Sai Medical College and Research Institute, Ammapettai,
Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, India.
Dharani Lenin
KMC Hospital, Mangalore, Karnataka, India.
Please See the book
here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mria/v3/8577E
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