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The Role of Condom Use Self-Efficacy on Intended and Actual Condom Use Among University Students in Ghana.

Kwaku Oppong AsanteJoseph OsafoPaul N Doku
Published in: Journal of community health (2016)
Little attention has been paid to the dimensions that help to predict and understand condom use among university students within an African context. A cross-sectional study involving 518 university students in Accra, Ghana was conducted to determine how the Condom Use self-Efficacy Scale-Ghana (CUSES-G) can predict both actual condom use and future condom use. Of all the participants, 84% were sexually active but less than half of the sample (48%) reported to have used condom during their last sexual intercourse. A hierarchical regression analysis showed that components of the Condom Use Self-Efficacy Scale (CUESE-G) such as appropriation, assertiveness, pleasure and intoxication, and STDs predicted condom use and condom use intentions. Behavioural change campaigns targeting university students should encourage condom use self-efficacy, as this would strengthen condom use, which is economically cheap and practically effective means of preventing STIs including HIV.
Keyphrases
  • men who have sex with men
  • hiv testing
  • hiv positive
  • hiv infected
  • human immunodeficiency virus
  • working memory
  • drug delivery
  • current status
  • data analysis