How can we improve knowledge and perceptions of menstruation? A mixed-methods research study

被引:11
|
作者
Moon, Gayoung [1 ]
Kim, Inkyung [1 ]
Kim, Habhin [1 ]
Choe, Suwan [1 ]
Jeon, Soyeon [1 ]
Cho, Jeonghun [1 ]
Hong, Sujeong [1 ]
Lee, Jisan [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Catholic Univ Pusan, Coll Nursing, 117 Coll Nursing,57 Oryundae Ro, Busan 46252, South Korea
[2] Hoseo Univ, Dept Nursing, Coll Life & Hlth Sci, RIC Bldg 20,Hoseo Ro 79 Beon Gil, Asan 31499, Chungcheongnamd, South Korea
[3] Hoseo Univ, Res Inst Basic Sci, RIC Bldg 20,Hoseo Ro 79 Beon Gil, Asan 31499, Chungcheongnamd, South Korea
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
Menstruation; Menstrual products; Young adult; Needs assessment; Sex education; AGE;
D O I
10.1186/s12905-020-01007-4
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: Traditionally, menstrual education has consisted of lectures directed toward women. The objective of this study was to design an innovative menstrual education (ME) program that reflects the needs of both young women and men, and verify its effectiveness. Methods: A mixed-method design was used to determine the program needs and assess young adults' knowledge and perceptions of menstruation and menstrual products. Focus group interviews were conducted with 14 young adults, and 150 young adults participated in an online survey. After developing the ME program, 10 young adults participated in a study to verify its effectiveness. Results: Interview results showed young adults wanted more information about menstrual products. The online survey revealed significant differences in knowledge based on participants' general characteristics and experience; exposure to menstruation and menstrual products positively impacted knowledge and perception. In addition, the results indicated young adults wanted ME content access via mobile and in-person modalities, designed for both genders, drawing on menstrual experts' knowledge. Based on these results, a multi-experimental menstrual education (MEME) program was designed and included: hands-on exposure to 60 menstrual products, product demonstrations with a female perineal model, a YouTube video created by the researchers, a true-or-false quiz, and question-and-answer sessions with menstrual experts. Conclusions: This study clarified the requirements of an innovative menstrual education program. It led to high satisfaction among participants, and improved knowledge and perceptions of menstruation and menstrual products. The online survey showed a correlation between the extent of received ME, and respondents' perception of menstrual products. This implied that a MEME program could change perceptions when conducted systematically; by extension it could ameliorate menstruation challenges attributed to poverty. Future research could further verify the effectiveness of the MEME program, using a larger sample, and examine its suitability for incorporation into official ME curricula at universities and companies.
引用
收藏
页数:11
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