University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services

Aim To understand university students‟ preferences and choices surrounding sexual health services, their overall satisfaction of existing services and what service characteristics influence their decisions. Method An online survey was designed, developed and open to students in years 2 or above, ex...

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Main Author: Whitmore, Katie
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/24809/
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author Whitmore, Katie
author_facet Whitmore, Katie
author_sort Whitmore, Katie
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Aim To understand university students‟ preferences and choices surrounding sexual health services, their overall satisfaction of existing services and what service characteristics influence their decisions. Method An online survey was designed, developed and open to students in years 2 or above, excluding those at Sutton Bonington Campus. Descriptive analysis, Chi-squared and Spearman‟s Rank tests were performed to compare variables such as gender and service access. Results When the exclusion criteria were applied, 95 useable questionnaires were returned. 78.9% of respondents were female and 64.2% had accessed a service. Females were significantly more likely to access services than males, and sexually active females accessed services more than those who were not. Desired service characteristics for existing service users included; ease of access, proximity to home, ease of obtaining an appointment or drop-in system and receiving text message results. Prospective users wanted services to be; confidential, run by friendly and professional staff and convenient to access. Not seeing anyone they knew was important. Service satisfaction was generally high. The internet was the main source of information about sexual health. Confidence in their own sexual health was positively correlated with confidence in knowing when and where to access services, being confident with their sexuality and understanding safe sex practices. Conclusion Access among males remains an issue. Current service users desired different characteristics than prospective users; ease of access is preferred over the fear of seeing someone they knew. Technology is important in services and the internet is a valuable tool in advertising and providing information about sexual health and services to students. Recommendations The expansion of nurse-led services should be at the forefront of service development. Nurses should be confident with new technologies to aid better service delivery. Health promotion should continue, especially via the internet, to educate about sexual health issues and the services available to help.
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spelling nottingham-248092018-01-30T17:54:35Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/24809/ University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services Whitmore, Katie Aim To understand university students‟ preferences and choices surrounding sexual health services, their overall satisfaction of existing services and what service characteristics influence their decisions. Method An online survey was designed, developed and open to students in years 2 or above, excluding those at Sutton Bonington Campus. Descriptive analysis, Chi-squared and Spearman‟s Rank tests were performed to compare variables such as gender and service access. Results When the exclusion criteria were applied, 95 useable questionnaires were returned. 78.9% of respondents were female and 64.2% had accessed a service. Females were significantly more likely to access services than males, and sexually active females accessed services more than those who were not. Desired service characteristics for existing service users included; ease of access, proximity to home, ease of obtaining an appointment or drop-in system and receiving text message results. Prospective users wanted services to be; confidential, run by friendly and professional staff and convenient to access. Not seeing anyone they knew was important. Service satisfaction was generally high. The internet was the main source of information about sexual health. Confidence in their own sexual health was positively correlated with confidence in knowing when and where to access services, being confident with their sexuality and understanding safe sex practices. Conclusion Access among males remains an issue. Current service users desired different characteristics than prospective users; ease of access is preferred over the fear of seeing someone they knew. Technology is important in services and the internet is a valuable tool in advertising and providing information about sexual health and services to students. Recommendations The expansion of nurse-led services should be at the forefront of service development. Nurses should be confident with new technologies to aid better service delivery. Health promotion should continue, especially via the internet, to educate about sexual health issues and the services available to help. 2011 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/24809/1/disertation_notifciation_form.pdf Whitmore, Katie (2011) University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Whitmore, Katie
University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title_full University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title_fullStr University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title_full_unstemmed University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title_short University Students’ Preference, Choice and Satisfaction of Sexual Health Services
title_sort university students’ preference, choice and satisfaction of sexual health services
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/24809/