Stigma surrounding sexually transmitted Infections among medical students in Germany
Stigma surrounding sexually transmitted Infections among medical students in Germany
Stigmatization by health care professionals leads to decreased help-seeking behaviors in those being stigmatized. Prejudicial attitudes are especially pronounced concerning sexually transmitted infections (STIs), which is crucial in light of rising prevalence rates of STIs in recent years. We aimed to examine stigmatization against patients with sexually versus non-sexually transmitted infections among medical students in Germany. We also assessed how a person’s sexual orientation or gender might contribute to stigma. Medical students (N = 332) read about a fictious patient with symptoms of pharyngitis after having had a casual sex encounter. Gender (female/male) and sexual orientation (hetero-/bi-/homosexual) of the patient as well as the pathogen causing the infection (gonococcus/H1N1-virus) were randomly varied. Afterwards, stigma against the patient was assessed. Patients with a gonococcal pharyngitis were perceived as more prone to engage in risky behavior, dumber, and less responsible than patients with a H1N1-virus pharyngitis. Bisexual patients were perceived as more prone to engage in risky behavior than hetero- and homosexual individuals. The predictability of the consequences of the patient’s actions was rated higher in bisexual patients. Stigmatizing attitudes toward patients with a STI were frequent, especially against bisexual patients. More education should be dedicated to sexual/LGB health during medical school to reduce existing stigma.
129-136
Klein, Verena
ae0b3b07-e55d-4793-bdc0-ceea23f00b9e
Brunner, Franziska
5d2ba8dd-9c22-498b-b604-e2310b7d3c1a
Grabowski, Max
1fd5f4c5-134f-48c3-97b7-fe1170208fd4
Turner, Daniel
aaf34c19-41b5-4153-a852-d60b2b310d2c
2 January 2021
Klein, Verena
ae0b3b07-e55d-4793-bdc0-ceea23f00b9e
Brunner, Franziska
5d2ba8dd-9c22-498b-b604-e2310b7d3c1a
Grabowski, Max
1fd5f4c5-134f-48c3-97b7-fe1170208fd4
Turner, Daniel
aaf34c19-41b5-4153-a852-d60b2b310d2c
Klein, Verena, Brunner, Franziska, Grabowski, Max and Turner, Daniel
(2021)
Stigma surrounding sexually transmitted Infections among medical students in Germany.
The Journal of Sex Research, 58 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/00224499.2020.1763238).
Abstract
Stigmatization by health care professionals leads to decreased help-seeking behaviors in those being stigmatized. Prejudicial attitudes are especially pronounced concerning sexually transmitted infections (STIs), which is crucial in light of rising prevalence rates of STIs in recent years. We aimed to examine stigmatization against patients with sexually versus non-sexually transmitted infections among medical students in Germany. We also assessed how a person’s sexual orientation or gender might contribute to stigma. Medical students (N = 332) read about a fictious patient with symptoms of pharyngitis after having had a casual sex encounter. Gender (female/male) and sexual orientation (hetero-/bi-/homosexual) of the patient as well as the pathogen causing the infection (gonococcus/H1N1-virus) were randomly varied. Afterwards, stigma against the patient was assessed. Patients with a gonococcal pharyngitis were perceived as more prone to engage in risky behavior, dumber, and less responsible than patients with a H1N1-virus pharyngitis. Bisexual patients were perceived as more prone to engage in risky behavior than hetero- and homosexual individuals. The predictability of the consequences of the patient’s actions was rated higher in bisexual patients. Stigmatizing attitudes toward patients with a STI were frequent, especially against bisexual patients. More education should be dedicated to sexual/LGB health during medical school to reduce existing stigma.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 June 2020
Published date: 2 January 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 474065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474065
ISSN: 0022-4499
PURE UUID: b3a682cb-85cc-41c8-8f4e-bc1eea05ad9d
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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2023 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16
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Author:
Verena Klein
Author:
Franziska Brunner
Author:
Max Grabowski
Author:
Daniel Turner
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