Knowledge CategoriesClassifieds |
Average Rating: no ratings submitted
Internet Use among Ugandan Adolescents: Implications for HIV InterventionInternet Solutions for Kids (Ybarra), Mbarara University of Science and Technology (Kiwanuka), University of California San Francisco (Emenyonu & Bangsberg) November 7 2006 SummaryPublished in PLoS Medicine, this 9-page article details the results of The Uganda Media and You Survey, a cross-sectional survey of internet use among adolescents (ages 12-18 years) in Mbarara, Uganda. The research was carried out in response to the observation that - while the internet has a number of characteristics that make it an attractive tool in health education and HIV prevention, especially for adolescents (e.g., interactivity, privacy, the overlap between education and play, and the ability to individualise information) - the internet's potential in resource-poor settings with higher HIV infection rates and limited access to other health care resources has not been explored. The authors begin by sharing some background trends in order to lay the groundwork for their comparison of desired and actual use of the internet to seek sexual health and HIV/AIDS information among Western - i.e. United States - adolescents, on the one hand, and their peers living in Uganda, on the other. Namely, studies have shown that:
As detailed here, researchers carried out a survey of 500 adolescent secondary students randomly selected from 5 participating boarding schools in Mbarara. They asked: To what extent are the adolescents exposed to computers and the internet? Are they interested in accessing health They found that 45% (223) of the respondents reported ever having used the internet, 78% (175) of The most commonly reported barriers to internet use are expense (43% [118]), not knowing where to access the internet (39% [107]), and not knowing how to use the internet (36% [101]). If internet access were free, 66% (330) reported that they would search for information about HIV/AIDS prevention online. In short, approximately the same proportion - roughly one-third - of adolescents in a rural setting in Uganda reported having used the internet to look up health-related information as of young people in the United States. Together with the result that an additional third said that they would go online to educate themselves about HIV/AIDS if internet use was free, the study suggests that initiatives in Africa to improve online access for adolescents as well as to develop content tailored to meet young people's individual risk profiles in specific settings could "be a promising strategy to deliver low-cost HIV/AIDS risk reduction interventions in resource-limited settings with expanding Internet access." ContactSourceWorld Health Organization (WHO) Mozambique eNews, November 7 2006. Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 28 2006 Last Updated April 04 2008 |
Login / RegisiterPollICT4D News |