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Title
AIDS: KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND INFECTION CONTROL PRACTICES OF GHANAIAN PROFESSIONAL AND TRAINEE NURSES |
Full text
http://dspace.knust.edu.gh/dspace/handle/123456789/703 |
Date
1995 |
Author(s)
ADDY, P. A. K. |
Abstract
This descriptive, cross sectional study seeks to determine knowledge about AIDS, attitudes towards AIDS/HIV-infected persons and infection control practices of Ghanaian professional and trainee nurses. The study had as its survey instrument a pretested, standardized and se f-administered questionnaire. The accessible (study) population (323/ included available and willing professional and trainee nurses from Hospitals and Nurses Training Schools in Ghana's three (Accra, Cape Coast and Kumasi) University cities. Using descriptive statistics, it was found that the nurses had a good knowledge about AIDS (> 90%) but that this knowledge did not seem to have alone influenced behaviour (r- 0.46) nor did it appreciably affect their attitudes towards HIV-infected/AIDS patients (r = 0.35). Infection control practices were also found to be influenced by a variety of factors including logistics. It is concluded that Ghana's AIDS education campaign succeeded in imparting the necessary knowledge about AIDS to the target population but failed to influence their behaviour and attitudes towards AIDS/ HIV infected persons and that a combination of other factors working in concert with knowledge seemed to be necessary for positive attitudinal change.Future studies should identify these factors and incorporate them in the educational strategies for AIDS control and prevention in Ghana. |
Publisher
KNUST |
Identifier
0855-0395 |
Repository
Kumasi - Kwame Nkrumah University
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Added to C-A: 2010-02-23;08:57:21 |
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