Cargando…

Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda

BACKGROUND: Evidence suggests that in spite of some adolescents being sexually active, many parents do not discuss sex-related issues with them due to lack of age-appropriate respectful vocabulary and skills. The likelihood of parent-adolescent communication improving sexual and reproductive health...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons, Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza, Banura, Cecily, Mugooda, Herbert, Kwesiga, Doris, Bastien, Sheri, Klepp, Knut-Inge
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4665849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26621129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12978-015-0099-3
_version_ 1782403625843163136
author Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons
Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza
Banura, Cecily
Mugooda, Herbert
Kwesiga, Doris
Bastien, Sheri
Klepp, Knut-Inge
author_facet Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons
Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza
Banura, Cecily
Mugooda, Herbert
Kwesiga, Doris
Bastien, Sheri
Klepp, Knut-Inge
author_sort Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Evidence suggests that in spite of some adolescents being sexually active, many parents do not discuss sex-related issues with them due to lack of age-appropriate respectful vocabulary and skills. The likelihood of parent-adolescent communication improving sexual and reproductive health outcomes appears plausible. The desire to understand parent-adolescent communication and how to improve it for promotion of healthy sexual behaviours inspired this research. The paper is meant to describe perceptions of adolescents, parents and school administrators about parent-adolescent communication on sexual issues; describe the content of such communication and identify factors that influence this communication. METHODS: The study was done among two urban and two rural secondary school students in their second year of education. Data were collected from 11 focus group discussions and 10 key Informants Interviews. Data management, analysis and interpretation followed thematic analysis principles. Illuminating verbatim quotations are used to illustrate findings. RESULTS: Parental warmth and acceptability of children was perceived by parents to be foundational for a healthy adolescent- parent communication. Perceptions of adolescents tended to point to more open and frequent communication with mothers than fathers and to cordial relationships with mothers. Fathers were perceived by adolescents to be strict, intimidating, unapproachable and unavailable. While adolescents tended to generally discuss sexual issues with mothers, male adolescents communicated less with anyone on sex, relationships and condoms. Much of the parent-adolescent communication was perceived to focus on sexually transmitted infections and body changes. Discussions of sex and dating with adolescents were perceived to be rare. Common triggers of sexuality discussions with female adolescents were; onset of menstruation and perceived abortion in the neighbourhood. Discussion with male adolescents, if it occurred was perceived to be triggered by parental suspicion of having female ‘friends’ or coming home late. Peers at school and mass media were perceived to the main source of sexuality information. CONCLUSIONS: Communication on sexuality issues between parents and their adolescent children was infrequent and critical elements like sex and specifics of protection against undesirable sexual behaviour consequences were avoided. Peers, schools and mass media should be creatively harnessed to improve parent-adolescent communication about sexuality issues.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4665849
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46658492015-12-02 Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza Banura, Cecily Mugooda, Herbert Kwesiga, Doris Bastien, Sheri Klepp, Knut-Inge Reprod Health Research BACKGROUND: Evidence suggests that in spite of some adolescents being sexually active, many parents do not discuss sex-related issues with them due to lack of age-appropriate respectful vocabulary and skills. The likelihood of parent-adolescent communication improving sexual and reproductive health outcomes appears plausible. The desire to understand parent-adolescent communication and how to improve it for promotion of healthy sexual behaviours inspired this research. The paper is meant to describe perceptions of adolescents, parents and school administrators about parent-adolescent communication on sexual issues; describe the content of such communication and identify factors that influence this communication. METHODS: The study was done among two urban and two rural secondary school students in their second year of education. Data were collected from 11 focus group discussions and 10 key Informants Interviews. Data management, analysis and interpretation followed thematic analysis principles. Illuminating verbatim quotations are used to illustrate findings. RESULTS: Parental warmth and acceptability of children was perceived by parents to be foundational for a healthy adolescent- parent communication. Perceptions of adolescents tended to point to more open and frequent communication with mothers than fathers and to cordial relationships with mothers. Fathers were perceived by adolescents to be strict, intimidating, unapproachable and unavailable. While adolescents tended to generally discuss sexual issues with mothers, male adolescents communicated less with anyone on sex, relationships and condoms. Much of the parent-adolescent communication was perceived to focus on sexually transmitted infections and body changes. Discussions of sex and dating with adolescents were perceived to be rare. Common triggers of sexuality discussions with female adolescents were; onset of menstruation and perceived abortion in the neighbourhood. Discussion with male adolescents, if it occurred was perceived to be triggered by parental suspicion of having female ‘friends’ or coming home late. Peers at school and mass media were perceived to the main source of sexuality information. CONCLUSIONS: Communication on sexuality issues between parents and their adolescent children was infrequent and critical elements like sex and specifics of protection against undesirable sexual behaviour consequences were avoided. Peers, schools and mass media should be creatively harnessed to improve parent-adolescent communication about sexuality issues. BioMed Central 2015-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4665849/ /pubmed/26621129 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12978-015-0099-3 Text en © Muhwezi et al. 2015 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Muhwezi, Wilson Winstons
Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza
Banura, Cecily
Mugooda, Herbert
Kwesiga, Doris
Bastien, Sheri
Klepp, Knut-Inge
Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title_full Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title_fullStr Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title_short Perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural Uganda
title_sort perceptions and experiences of adolescents, parents and school administrators regarding adolescent-parent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in urban and rural uganda
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4665849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26621129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12978-015-0099-3
work_keys_str_mv AT muhweziwilsonwinstons perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT katahoireanneruhweza perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT banuracecily perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT mugoodaherbert perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT kwesigadoris perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT bastiensheri perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda
AT kleppknutinge perceptionsandexperiencesofadolescentsparentsandschooladministratorsregardingadolescentparentcommunicationonsexualandreproductivehealthissuesinurbanandruraluganda