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Evaluation of an assessment instrument for a sexual health curriculum for nurses and midwifery students in Tanzania : The sexual health education professionals scale (SHEPS)

Ross, M. W. ; Leshabari, S. ; Rosser, B. R.S. ; Trent, M. ; Mgopa, L. ; Wadley, J. ; Kohli, N. and Agardh, A. LU orcid (2018) In Applied Nursing Research 40. p.152-156
Abstract

We assessed the structure and content of a new scale, the SHEPS, to assess change in sexual health confidence, knowledge and attitudes in nursing and midwifery students following an intervention (a 2-day standardized workshop on sexual health). Students were 78 Tanzanian nursing and midwifery students attending a University of Health Sciences, who were assessed immediately before and after the workshop on matched pre- and post-workshop questionnaires. Data confirmed significant changed pre- and post-test on knowledge and confidence on topics taught in the workshop, with the effect also extending to some topics not or minimally covered, suggesting that there was a general increase in confidence and a perception of increased knowledge... (More)

We assessed the structure and content of a new scale, the SHEPS, to assess change in sexual health confidence, knowledge and attitudes in nursing and midwifery students following an intervention (a 2-day standardized workshop on sexual health). Students were 78 Tanzanian nursing and midwifery students attending a University of Health Sciences, who were assessed immediately before and after the workshop on matched pre- and post-workshop questionnaires. Data confirmed significant changed pre- and post-test on knowledge and confidence on topics taught in the workshop, with the effect also extending to some topics not or minimally covered, suggesting that there was a general increase in confidence and a perception of increased knowledge following the workshop. There was power to detect differences even with a moderate sized matched sample. Correlations between knowledge and confidence on the same content items were between 0.52 and 0.63, suggesting that respondents could clearly distinguish between knowledge and confidence. There were no significant differences pre- and post-test on several controversial cultural and religious attitudes including on abortion and non-vaginal penetrative sex. Alpha coefficients were 0.93 for pre-test and 0.90 for post-test. This field test demonstrates the preliminary appropriateness of the SHEPS as a tool for evaluating sexual health interventions in health care workers.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Africa, Evaluation, Sexual health, Tanzania
in
Applied Nursing Research
volume
40
pages
5 pages
publisher
W.B. Saunders
external identifiers
  • pmid:29579491
  • scopus:85042213453
ISSN
0897-1897
DOI
10.1016/j.apnr.2018.01.005
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a46ee9d0-d5e3-43b3-985e-e716b0e9b7bb
date added to LUP
2018-03-05 15:01:01
date last changed
2024-04-01 02:03:04
@article{a46ee9d0-d5e3-43b3-985e-e716b0e9b7bb,
  abstract     = {{<p>We assessed the structure and content of a new scale, the SHEPS, to assess change in sexual health confidence, knowledge and attitudes in nursing and midwifery students following an intervention (a 2-day standardized workshop on sexual health). Students were 78 Tanzanian nursing and midwifery students attending a University of Health Sciences, who were assessed immediately before and after the workshop on matched pre- and post-workshop questionnaires. Data confirmed significant changed pre- and post-test on knowledge and confidence on topics taught in the workshop, with the effect also extending to some topics not or minimally covered, suggesting that there was a general increase in confidence and a perception of increased knowledge following the workshop. There was power to detect differences even with a moderate sized matched sample. Correlations between knowledge and confidence on the same content items were between 0.52 and 0.63, suggesting that respondents could clearly distinguish between knowledge and confidence. There were no significant differences pre- and post-test on several controversial cultural and religious attitudes including on abortion and non-vaginal penetrative sex. Alpha coefficients were 0.93 for pre-test and 0.90 for post-test. This field test demonstrates the preliminary appropriateness of the SHEPS as a tool for evaluating sexual health interventions in health care workers.</p>}},
  author       = {{Ross, M. W. and Leshabari, S. and Rosser, B. R.S. and Trent, M. and Mgopa, L. and Wadley, J. and Kohli, N. and Agardh, A.}},
  issn         = {{0897-1897}},
  keywords     = {{Africa; Evaluation; Sexual health; Tanzania}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  pages        = {{152--156}},
  publisher    = {{W.B. Saunders}},
  series       = {{Applied Nursing Research}},
  title        = {{Evaluation of an assessment instrument for a sexual health curriculum for nurses and midwifery students in Tanzania : The sexual health education professionals scale (SHEPS)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apnr.2018.01.005}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.apnr.2018.01.005}},
  volume       = {{40}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}