The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === College students demonstrate a persistent lack of knowledge about safe sexual practices and engage in sexual behavior that puts them at risk for preventable health issues, specifically, sexually transmitted infections and unplanned preg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hernandez, Rachael
Other Authors: Petronio, Sandra
Language:en_US
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/21066
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-210662021-10-04T05:06:51Z The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior Hernandez, Rachael Petronio, Sandra Bute, Jennifer Hoffman-Longtin, Krista Schwartz, Peter college students communication privacy sexual behavior Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) College students demonstrate a persistent lack of knowledge about safe sexual practices and engage in sexual behavior that puts them at risk for preventable health issues, specifically, sexually transmitted infections and unplanned pregnancy. Fortunately, physicians have an opportunity to provide accurate and timely information about safe sexual behavior to individuals in their care. However, many young people, and in particular young women, are reticent to talk to their physicians about sexual behavior because they typically consider the information to be private. They draw thick privacy boundaries around this information, leading to a missed opportunity to communicate about sexual behavior with their healthcare provider. Exacerbating this issue is the fact that many physicians are also uncomfortable discussing sexual topics with their patients. In this dissertation, Communication Privacy Management (CPM) theory is used to investigate the criteria that female college students employ to negotiate the disclosure and concealment of information about sexual behavior to physicians. Qualitative analysis of open-ended interviews with female college students were used to describe and explain the way college students perceive issues concerning disclosure of sexual behaviors to their physician. These findings have the potential to improve communication interventions both for female college students and healthcare professionals. 2021-10-03 2019-10-08T17:47:29Z 2021-10-03T09:30:11Z 2019-09 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1805/21066 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic college students
communication
privacy
sexual behavior
spellingShingle college students
communication
privacy
sexual behavior
Hernandez, Rachael
The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === College students demonstrate a persistent lack of knowledge about safe sexual practices and engage in sexual behavior that puts them at risk for preventable health issues, specifically, sexually transmitted infections and unplanned pregnancy. Fortunately, physicians have an opportunity to provide accurate and timely information about safe sexual behavior to individuals in their care. However, many young people, and in particular young women, are reticent to talk to their physicians about sexual behavior because they typically consider the information to be private. They draw thick privacy boundaries around this information, leading to a missed opportunity to communicate about sexual behavior with their healthcare provider. Exacerbating this issue is the fact that many physicians are also uncomfortable discussing sexual topics with their patients. In this dissertation, Communication Privacy Management (CPM) theory is used to investigate the criteria that female college students employ to negotiate the disclosure and concealment of information about sexual behavior to physicians. Qualitative analysis of open-ended interviews with female college students were used to describe and explain the way college students perceive issues concerning disclosure of sexual behaviors to their physician. These findings have the potential to improve communication interventions both for female college students and healthcare professionals. === 2021-10-03
author2 Petronio, Sandra
author_facet Petronio, Sandra
Hernandez, Rachael
author Hernandez, Rachael
author_sort Hernandez, Rachael
title The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
title_short The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
title_full The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
title_fullStr The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
title_full_unstemmed The Person That Asks the Question Controls the Conversation: College Students' Privacy Management with Physicians about Sexual Behavior
title_sort person that asks the question controls the conversation: college students' privacy management with physicians about sexual behavior
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/21066
work_keys_str_mv AT hernandezrachael thepersonthatasksthequestioncontrolstheconversationcollegestudentsprivacymanagementwithphysiciansaboutsexualbehavior
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