Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians

Introduction: There is a growing interest among adolescents to obtain sexual health information online, which could be helpful in rural areas where adolescents face unique obstacles to contraception access, and medically accurate sex education is not mandated. Aim: This study piloted a comprehensive...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennie Yoost, MD, MSc, Morgan Ruley, MHA, Levi Durfee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-02-01
Series:Sexual Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116120301896
id doaj-fbaf1a3e8b744aad8a1eec3af8773d77
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fbaf1a3e8b744aad8a1eec3af8773d772021-02-27T04:38:01ZengElsevierSexual Medicine2050-11612021-02-0191100302Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident PhysiciansJennie Yoost, MD, MSc0Morgan Ruley, MHA1Levi Durfee2Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Huntington, WV; Corresponding Author: Jennie Yoost MD, MSc, Associate Professor Pediatric Adolescent Gynecology, Marshall University, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1600 Medical Center Drive Suite 4500 Huntington, WV 25701. Tel: 304-691-1400; Fax: 304-691-1461Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Huntington, WVVice President Web Services, Bulldog Creative Services, Huntington, WVIntroduction: There is a growing interest among adolescents to obtain sexual health information online, which could be helpful in rural areas where adolescents face unique obstacles to contraception access, and medically accurate sex education is not mandated. Aim: This study piloted a comprehensive sex education self-study website among undergraduate students and resident physicians to assess the accuracy and feasibility for future use in younger adolescents. Methods: A sex education website developed by a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist (OBGYN) was piloted among a group of OBGYN resident physicians and undergraduates from West Virginia. Groups were chosen to assess the accuracy of information and acceptability for use in younger adolescents. The 30-minute curriculum was a series of short videos (2–4 minutes each) covering anatomy, physiology, sexuality, gender identity, relationship health, contraception, and sexually transmitted infection prevention. Data were obtained on subjects’ past experience and perception of sex education. Subjects also evaluated the website for usefulness and accuracy. Outcomes: Main outcomes included a Likert scale assessment of each curriculum session’s usefulness, accuracy, and how easy it was to follow. Results: 24 subjects (14 undergraduates and 10 physicians) participated during September and October of 2019. All except for 1 subject had sex education taught in school; 11 (45.8%) reported it to be “low quality”; 23 (95.8%) reported being taught in a classroom. Individual website video sessions were reported to be highly accurate, very easy to follow, and very useful. All subjects (100%) felt that high school adolescents would be interested in the self-study website. Conclusions: A self-study website was successfully tested and found to be a well-accepted way to teach sex education among this pilot group. Future work involves testing this tool among younger adolescent subjects.Yoost J, Ruley M, Durfee L. Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians. Sex Med 2021;9:100302.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116120301896Sex Educationexual Healthebsiteontraceptionuralechnology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennie Yoost, MD, MSc
Morgan Ruley, MHA
Levi Durfee
spellingShingle Jennie Yoost, MD, MSc
Morgan Ruley, MHA
Levi Durfee
Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
Sexual Medicine
Sex Education
exual Health
ebsite
ontraception
ural
echnology
author_facet Jennie Yoost, MD, MSc
Morgan Ruley, MHA
Levi Durfee
author_sort Jennie Yoost, MD, MSc
title Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
title_short Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
title_full Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
title_fullStr Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
title_full_unstemmed Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians
title_sort acceptability of a comprehensive sex education self-study website for teaching reproductive health: a pilot study among college students and obstetrics and gynecology resident physicians
publisher Elsevier
series Sexual Medicine
issn 2050-1161
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Introduction: There is a growing interest among adolescents to obtain sexual health information online, which could be helpful in rural areas where adolescents face unique obstacles to contraception access, and medically accurate sex education is not mandated. Aim: This study piloted a comprehensive sex education self-study website among undergraduate students and resident physicians to assess the accuracy and feasibility for future use in younger adolescents. Methods: A sex education website developed by a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist (OBGYN) was piloted among a group of OBGYN resident physicians and undergraduates from West Virginia. Groups were chosen to assess the accuracy of information and acceptability for use in younger adolescents. The 30-minute curriculum was a series of short videos (2–4 minutes each) covering anatomy, physiology, sexuality, gender identity, relationship health, contraception, and sexually transmitted infection prevention. Data were obtained on subjects’ past experience and perception of sex education. Subjects also evaluated the website for usefulness and accuracy. Outcomes: Main outcomes included a Likert scale assessment of each curriculum session’s usefulness, accuracy, and how easy it was to follow. Results: 24 subjects (14 undergraduates and 10 physicians) participated during September and October of 2019. All except for 1 subject had sex education taught in school; 11 (45.8%) reported it to be “low quality”; 23 (95.8%) reported being taught in a classroom. Individual website video sessions were reported to be highly accurate, very easy to follow, and very useful. All subjects (100%) felt that high school adolescents would be interested in the self-study website. Conclusions: A self-study website was successfully tested and found to be a well-accepted way to teach sex education among this pilot group. Future work involves testing this tool among younger adolescent subjects.Yoost J, Ruley M, Durfee L. Acceptability of a Comprehensive Sex Education Self-Study Website for Teaching Reproductive Health: A Pilot Study Among College Students and Obstetrics and Gynecology Resident Physicians. Sex Med 2021;9:100302.
topic Sex Education
exual Health
ebsite
ontraception
ural
echnology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116120301896
work_keys_str_mv AT jennieyoostmdmsc acceptabilityofacomprehensivesexeducationselfstudywebsiteforteachingreproductivehealthapilotstudyamongcollegestudentsandobstetricsandgynecologyresidentphysicians
AT morganruleymha acceptabilityofacomprehensivesexeducationselfstudywebsiteforteachingreproductivehealthapilotstudyamongcollegestudentsandobstetricsandgynecologyresidentphysicians
AT levidurfee acceptabilityofacomprehensivesexeducationselfstudywebsiteforteachingreproductivehealthapilotstudyamongcollegestudentsandobstetricsandgynecologyresidentphysicians
_version_ 1724248552775876608