Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University

Introduction: The quantity and quality of education in the field of human sexuality vary greatly in medical education programs in the United States and Europe. Aim: The current state of medical school education with regard to human sexuality was assessed at an Austrian medical university. Methods: S...

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Main Authors: Nikola Komlenac, PhD, Heidi Siller, PhD, Margarethe Hochleitner, MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-09-01
Series:Sexual Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116119300443
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spelling doaj-1216d1e20df5423b843fbfa9d96fa6e82020-11-25T00:48:19ZengElsevierSexual Medicine2050-11612019-09-0173318325Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical UniversityNikola Komlenac, PhD0Heidi Siller, PhD1Margarethe Hochleitner, MD2Corresponding Author: Nikola Komlenac, PhD, Gender Medicine Unit, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innrain 36/7, 6020 Innsbruck. Tel: +43 512 9003-71859; Fax: +43 512 9003-74859; Gender Medicine Unit, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, AustriaGender Medicine Unit, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, AustriaGender Medicine Unit, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, AustriaIntroduction: The quantity and quality of education in the field of human sexuality vary greatly in medical education programs in the United States and Europe. Aim: The current state of medical school education with regard to human sexuality was assessed at an Austrian medical university. Methods: Self-constructed questionnaires and the Beliefs About Sexual Functioning Scale were filled out by 391 medical students (mean age = 24.0, SD = 2.5; 52.4% women, 47.6% men). Descriptive statistics are reported for summarizing students’ responses, and structural equation models were calculated to reveal associations between variables of interest. Main Outcome Measures: The outcome variable in the structural equation models was students’ confidence in addressing sexual health concerns of patients. Results: Most students were not instructed in sexual history taking (96.9%), sexual behavior (94.3%), love (97.4%) or sexuality in elderly persons (95.1%), and they reported having poor knowledge of these topics. Most students (72.5%) reported having little or no confidence in addressing patients’ sexual health concerns. The number of addressed topics was positively associated with male (β = 0.47, P < .001) and female students’ (β = 0.52, P < .001) knowledge. Knowledge was positively associated with male (β = .49, P < 0.001) and female students’ (β = 0.33, P < .001) confidence in addressing sexual health concerns and was negatively associated with stereotypical sexual functioning beliefs in the male subsample (β = −0.26, P = .009). Conclusions: Most medical students revealed that the teaching of important sexual health content (eg, sexual history taking) was deficient at this medical university. Education in sexual health issues needs to be increased to positively influence students’ knowledge of and consequently their confidence regarding dealing with patients’ sexual health concerns.Komlenac N, Siller H, Hochleitner M. Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University. Sex Med 2019;7:318–325. Key Words: Medical Education, Austria, Medical Students, Knowledge About Sexual Medicine, Beliefs About Sexual Functioning, Sexuality Educationhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116119300443
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nikola Komlenac, PhD
Heidi Siller, PhD
Margarethe Hochleitner, MD
spellingShingle Nikola Komlenac, PhD
Heidi Siller, PhD
Margarethe Hochleitner, MD
Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
Sexual Medicine
author_facet Nikola Komlenac, PhD
Heidi Siller, PhD
Margarethe Hochleitner, MD
author_sort Nikola Komlenac, PhD
title Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
title_short Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
title_full Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
title_fullStr Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
title_full_unstemmed Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University
title_sort medical students indicate the need for increased sexuality education at an austrian medical university
publisher Elsevier
series Sexual Medicine
issn 2050-1161
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Introduction: The quantity and quality of education in the field of human sexuality vary greatly in medical education programs in the United States and Europe. Aim: The current state of medical school education with regard to human sexuality was assessed at an Austrian medical university. Methods: Self-constructed questionnaires and the Beliefs About Sexual Functioning Scale were filled out by 391 medical students (mean age = 24.0, SD = 2.5; 52.4% women, 47.6% men). Descriptive statistics are reported for summarizing students’ responses, and structural equation models were calculated to reveal associations between variables of interest. Main Outcome Measures: The outcome variable in the structural equation models was students’ confidence in addressing sexual health concerns of patients. Results: Most students were not instructed in sexual history taking (96.9%), sexual behavior (94.3%), love (97.4%) or sexuality in elderly persons (95.1%), and they reported having poor knowledge of these topics. Most students (72.5%) reported having little or no confidence in addressing patients’ sexual health concerns. The number of addressed topics was positively associated with male (β = 0.47, P < .001) and female students’ (β = 0.52, P < .001) knowledge. Knowledge was positively associated with male (β = .49, P < 0.001) and female students’ (β = 0.33, P < .001) confidence in addressing sexual health concerns and was negatively associated with stereotypical sexual functioning beliefs in the male subsample (β = −0.26, P = .009). Conclusions: Most medical students revealed that the teaching of important sexual health content (eg, sexual history taking) was deficient at this medical university. Education in sexual health issues needs to be increased to positively influence students’ knowledge of and consequently their confidence regarding dealing with patients’ sexual health concerns.Komlenac N, Siller H, Hochleitner M. Medical Students Indicate the Need for Increased Sexuality Education at an Austrian Medical University. Sex Med 2019;7:318–325. Key Words: Medical Education, Austria, Medical Students, Knowledge About Sexual Medicine, Beliefs About Sexual Functioning, Sexuality Education
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116119300443
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