Lw. Svenson et al., A REVIEW OF THE KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND BEHAVIORS OF UNIVERSITY-STUDENTS CONCERNING HIV AIDS/, Health promotion international, 12(1), 1997, pp. 61-68
This paper reviews the current literature related to HIV/AIDS and univ
ersity students, and discusses how this information can be used in hea
lth promotion programming and evaluation. Research related to HIV/AIDS
among university students has focused primarily on the assessment of
knowledge, attitudes and behaviours and, to a lesser extent, on the ef
fectiveness of educational interventions. Ensuring the greatest succes
s involves a multifaceted and coordinated effort which brings together
faculty, administration, students, health education professionals and
the external community of students. Any program targeting HIV/AIDS ca
n be included in a more comprehensive initiative for improving and mai
ntaining student health. The skills learned to reduce the risk of HIV
infection are transferable to other health issues and involve empoweri
ng students to take central and responsibility for their actions. This
empowerment, combined with good knowledge and healthy attitudes, will
allow the skills learned to be used when students are outside of the
university setting. Social research can contribute to the achievement
of safer sexual behaviour in three ways. First, by describing the rang
e of the problem. Second, by detecting the most dominant factors that
affect the acceptance or rejection of recommended health behaviours. S
uch factors have to be studied on the personal level, as well as on th
e social organizational levels-the specific community and its culture.
Third, by evaluating the effectiveness of educational interventions b
y monitoring changes in health beliefs and behaviours, and particularl
y in association to specific methods of intervention. Repeated surveys
and evaluation studies are necessary since beliefs and behaviour chan
ge over time. Based on the findings of such studies, health promotion
should be planned, implemented and continuously evaluated, updated and
changed. This indicates that health promotion is one of the areas whe
re social science theory, research and practice have to be intertwined
on an ongoing basis in order to be effective.