Thursday, October 8, 2009
One of the primary goals of Roots of Health is to provide educational outreach about reproductive health to women and girls. Once we begin our direct service, we will be working with underserved communities and with participants who have likely not had any formal education since grade school. We are currently still creating and tweaking our materials, so when we were invited to teach a two-day seminar at Palawan State University on reproductive health, we jumped at the chance to test our materials. The students were from the College of Nursing and were three years into their coursework. In the Philippines elementary school only goes up to 6th grade and high school only up to 10th grade, so students enter college at age 16. So despite being third year students, my seminar participants were only 18 or 19 years old. I assumed that, being nursing students, the participants would have already covered a lot of the material I was presenting. I was wrong!
I was shocked at the levels of knowledge, or lack thereof, that the students had about general reproductive health and HIV. Here are some of the highlights:
When it comes to attitudes about sex, the Filipino “macho” culture and gender expectations really emerged.
At the close of the workshop I administered the same survey I gave the students at the beginning of the two day seminar. Attitudes did not change a great deal but some knowledge did increase, and many of the misperceptions students had about basic reproductive health and HIV were corrected.
This experience was very positive in that the students were thoughtful in their discussions and appreciated the chance to speak freely about issues that are seen as taboo. And I think many of them really learned some new things that hopefully will help protect their health. The experience also reinforced the immense need for disseminating information about reproductive health. The students I met are not necessarily wealthy, but they are much more privileged and educated than the communities we will be targeting in our work. When future nurses know so little, it is likely that individuals without any formal training or education will know even less. We have a lot of work to do!
- Posted by Ami , Executive Director