An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model
Health professionals have important roles to play in educating their clients about HIV prevention. However, research suggests that health professionals, including dental professionals, more often than not fail to provide any HIV education to their clients. This study employed Green and Kreuter'...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-439792021-05-15T05:26:44Z An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model Johnston, Paula W. Health and Physical Education Howze, Elizabeth H. Southard, Douglas R. Novascone, Mary Ann LD5655.V855 1993.J645 Dental care -- Safety measures -- Virginia Dental hygienists -- Virginia -- Attitudes HIV infections -- Transmission Health professionals have important roles to play in educating their clients about HIV prevention. However, research suggests that health professionals, including dental professionals, more often than not fail to provide any HIV education to their clients. This study employed Green and Kreuter's PRECEDE model to assess those factors that influence the provision of HIV education by dental hygienists in Virginia. <p>A 22 item closed-ended questionnaire which addressed predisposing, enabling, and reinforcing factors was mailed to 649 randomly selected Virginia licensed dental hygienists. Fifty-five percent (360) of those contacted completed and returned the questionnaire. <p>Key factors found to impact the provision of HIV education by dental hygienists were having received HIV education during formal training or continuing education courses, perceived self efficacy to deliver HIV education, and characteristics of the practice setting. Chi square analysis showed that dental hygienists with formal HIV education were more likely to educate their clients about HIV risk reduction than dental hygienists who had not received such education (p=.04). Dental hygienists who had received HIV education through continuing education were also more likely to provide HIV education to their clients than dental hygienists who had not (p=.05). Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:41:32Z 2014-03-14T21:41:32Z 1993-05-13 2009-07-29 2009-07-29 2009-07-29 Thesis Text etd-07292009-090312 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43979 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07292009-090312/ en OCLC# 28767186 LD5655.V855_1993.J645.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ x, 95 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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LD5655.V855 1993.J645 Dental care -- Safety measures -- Virginia Dental hygienists -- Virginia -- Attitudes HIV infections -- Transmission |
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LD5655.V855 1993.J645 Dental care -- Safety measures -- Virginia Dental hygienists -- Virginia -- Attitudes HIV infections -- Transmission Johnston, Paula W. An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
description |
Health professionals have important roles to play in
educating their clients about HIV prevention. However,
research suggests that health professionals, including dental
professionals, more often than not fail to provide any HIV
education to their clients. This study employed Green and
Kreuter's PRECEDE model to assess those factors that influence
the provision of HIV education by dental hygienists in
Virginia.
<p>A 22 item closed-ended questionnaire which addressed
predisposing, enabling, and reinforcing factors was mailed to
649 randomly selected Virginia licensed dental hygienists.
Fifty-five percent (360) of those contacted completed and
returned the questionnaire.
<p>Key factors found to impact the provision of HIV
education by dental hygienists were having received HIV
education during formal training or continuing education
courses, perceived self efficacy to deliver HIV education, and
characteristics of the practice setting. Chi square analysis
showed that dental hygienists with formal HIV education were
more likely to educate their clients about HIV risk reduction
than dental hygienists who had not received such education
(p=.04). Dental hygienists who had received HIV education
through continuing education were also more likely to provide
HIV education to their clients than dental hygienists who had
not (p=.05). === Master of Science |
author2 |
Health and Physical Education |
author_facet |
Health and Physical Education Johnston, Paula W. |
author |
Johnston, Paula W. |
author_sort |
Johnston, Paula W. |
title |
An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
title_short |
An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
title_full |
An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
title_fullStr |
An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
title_full_unstemmed |
An assessment of the provision of HIV education among dental hygienists: application of the PRECEDE model |
title_sort |
assessment of the provision of hiv education among dental hygienists: application of the precede model |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43979 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07292009-090312/ |
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AT johnstonpaulaw anassessmentoftheprovisionofhiveducationamongdentalhygienistsapplicationoftheprecedemodel AT johnstonpaulaw assessmentoftheprovisionofhiveducationamongdentalhygienistsapplicationoftheprecedemodel |
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