According to Durham Region Public Health Department, 40% of youth, aged 15-19
years, living in Durham Region said that they had engaged in sexual intercourse in the last year,
with 570 youth becoming pregnant. In Durham Region 2.3/100,000 youth between the ages of 15
and 24 years are infected with HIV/AIDS annually. Chlamydia rates have also been steadily
increasing with 1,250 cases reported in 2009 in Durham Region, with the rates of STIs in Canada
being the highest in youth ages 15 to 24 years.
This study was undertaken as a capacity building venture to engage youth in Durham
Region and allow them to identify their sexual needs and priorities for HIV prevention and
healthy sexual development. The study also had four objectives: (1) To assess whether youth
know about the sexual health services that are available to them; (2) To discover how youth
perceive the sexual health services they are aware of; (3) To identify where youth currently
receive sexual health resources; and (4) To understand where, how and from whom youth would
like to receive sexual health resources.
The Durham Region Healthy SexYouthality Project was a community-based research
study conducted by the Durham Region Healthy SexYouthality Coalition. The Project was a
qualitative research study that employed focus group sessions to engage youth in discussions
pertaining to their sexual health. The study sample included 32 participants ranging from 15 to
24 years of age, with the mean age of 18.96 years. Of the 32 participants, 19 were female, 12
were male and 1 identified as transgender. The coalition identified four populations within
Durham Region; urban, rural, semi-rural and LGBTQ youth, which resulted in 10 focus groups.
The size of each meeting ranged from four to nine participants and each was audiotaped. The
data was transcribed and then analyzed using open coding with the NVivo 9 software.
Several themes about sexual health services emerged from the study. They include: lack
of knowledge of services, the need for increased awareness; the perceptions youth have about
health services including that they are inaccessible, not anonymous, not confidential, not
knowledgeable, are judgemental but are youth-friendly; where youth currently receive
information including the internet, media, friends/peers, school, parents and health professionals;
and how youth would prefer to receive sexual health education such as through trustworthy
internet sources, improved sexual education in schools and new community programs.
In conclusion, youth in Durham Region need more information about the sexual health
services that are available to them and changes need to be made to make them more accessible,
anonymous and confidential. Youth also prefer to access information about sexual health through
convenient and reliable sources and it is up to organizations working with youth to ensure that
these needs are best being met. / UOIT
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:OOSHDU.10155/250 |
Date | 01 July 2012 |
Creators | Higginson, Alyssa |
Contributors | George, Clemon |
Source Sets | Library and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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