Background: Adolescence is a period of vulnerability with the onset of multiple risky behaviour which exposes them to HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases and as such, the timely introduction and uptake of strategies like HIV Counselling and Testing will reduce transmission and provide access to preventive services. Objective: To assess the knowledge, attitude and prevalence of HIV Counselling and Testing among secondary in-school adolescents in Orlu Local Government Area, Imo State, Nigeria. Methods: A cross sectional analytical study design was used that selected students aged 13 - 19 years in senior classes SS1 to SS3 attending secondary schools. Data was collected using a pretested, semi-structured questionnaire. Descriptive analyses were done with frequencies and summary statistics. Chi square statistic was computed and p value was set at 0.05 significant level. Results: Though most of the respondents were aware of HIV/AIDS (99%) and HIV Counselling and Testing (92%), the majority of the respondents had a poor level of overall knowledge (61%) and attitude (70%) towards HIV Counselling and Testing. The prevalence of HIV Counselling and Testing amongst the respondents was very low (7%). Furthermore, there was a statistically significant relationship between the level of overall knowledge and level of overall attitude towards HIV Counselling and Testing ( p < 0.000). Conclusion: Identifying and closing the gaps in their knowledge and attitude towards HIV Counselling and Testing, will form the basis for the introduction of adolescent-tailored strategies that will further encourage and improve voluntary and confidential uptake of HIV Counselling and Testing among the adolescents.
Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection produces a potentially devastating and transmissible disease of the immune system but with the introduction and strict adherence to antiretroviral therapy, it has become a chronic manageable disease, with people infected with HIV now living a long, healthy and productive life [
In 2012, an estimated 2.1 million adolescents worldwide were living with HIV, with about 33% of all new infections occurring in young people aged 15 - 24 years, out of which, 39% occurred in adolescents aged 15 - 19 years [
In 2015, Western and Central Africa had an estimated 6.5 million people living with HIV, out of which, 500,000 were children (0 - 14 years) and 650,000 were young people (15 - 24 years). Also in that year, newly acquired infections were estimated to be 410,000 out of which, 66,000 were children, 110,000 were young people and 36,000 were adolescents (15 - 19 years) with an estimated 60% of these new infections occurring in Nigeria [
Adolescence is a period of vulnerability with the onset of multiple risky behaviour such as smoking, inappropriate alcohol consumption and drug use, with the consequences of an increased risk of engaging in unprotected, multiple sexual experiences [
In spite of the fact that in-school adolescents are still under some form of guidance from parents, caregivers or school authorities, they appear to be influenced mostly by their peers and the environment; and as a consequence, they are involved in experimenting in sexuality, sexual orientation and other new experiences [
Even with the knowledge of HIV/AIDS, adolescents still have several misconceptions about transmission and they do not perceive themselves to be at risk of being infected, as this could encourage the practice of unsafe sexual behavioral habits [
The adolescents, not only have an increased risk of HIV/AIDS from behavioral transmission but also from vertical transmission (mother to child). The infection from vertical transmission could be slow, progressing from infancy into adolescence without treatment; as up to 33% of HIV infected infants not commenced on treatment, become slow progressors with a median survival of more than 10 years [
HCT uptake among adolescents has been low, due to factors such as perception of staff judgmental attitude, confidentiality of the process and result, stigmatization and more especially the policy regarding age of consent to testing [
In Nigeria, the adolescents’ rights are limited, as there are several issues surrounding the age of consent especially for HCT among adolescents, as this has hampered progress in adolescent management and research of HIV/AIDS and other sexual reproductive health issues. In 2014, the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Health issued guidelines for age of consent in therapeutic and non-therapeutic research; as any person aged 16 and 13 years and above respectively [
The study was conducted in Orlu Local Government Area (LGA), one of the 27 LGA’s of Imo State which is in South Eastern part of Nigeria. Orlu LGA occupies an area of 132.9 sq. km with a population density of about 1074 persons per sq. km [
The study population comprised, students aged 13-19 years in senior classes SS1 to SS3 attending public secondary schools in Orlu LGA.
Inclusion criteria; students in the senior classes SS1 to SS3, aged 13 to 19 years in the school register of selected secondary schools as at June 2016. Exclusion criteria; selected students from the register that were absent from school during the study.
The minimum sample size was estimated using Cochran formula [
when n = minimum sample size, Z = Standard normal deviate corresponding to the probability of type I error is 1.96, p = prevalence of HCT among adolescents from Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey 2013 [
The study was a cross sectional analytical design that used simple random sampling techniques to select four secondary schools and enroll 300 students after permission from the selected school authorities and verbal consent from the participating students were given. Firstly, from the sampling frame of 18 public secondary schools in Orlu LGA, four secondary schools were selected by simple random sampling using ballots. Secondly, within each secondary school, from each of the arms of the senior classes SS1, SS2 and SS3, twenty-five students were selected irrespective of gender from their respective school registers by simple random sampling using table of random numbers. The selected students that did not consent or were absent during the conduct of the study were excluded and replaced through further random selection from the school register.
In each of the selected schools, 75 students were enrolled and assembled in two classrooms where data was collected from them using a pretested semi-struc- tured self-administered questionnaire. The questionnaire was pretested in a secondary school located in another LGA, outside the study area, that established content validity and a reliability coefficient (alpha) of 0.83.
The questionnaire comprised 4 sections; section one: the socio-demographic characteristics, section two: knowledge of HIV/AIDS, section three: knowledge of HCT and section four: Attitude towards HCT. The level of knowledge of HCT was determined by scoring the questions that assessed knowledge. For a single response question, a correct answer was scored 2; an incorrect answer was scored 0. For a multiple response question, up to five answers, every correct answer was scored 1 and incorrect answer was scored 0. In assessing the level of attitude towards HCT, for a single response question, an answer connoting a positive attitude was scored 2 and a negative or not sure attitude was scored 0. For a multiple response question, up to five answers, every answer connoting a positive attitude was scored 1 and for any answer connoting a negative or not sure attitude was scored 0. The aggregate scores for each respondent according to the level of knowledge and attitude towards HCT were translated to a percentage and assessed against a scale of less than 60% for poor and greater than 60% for good.
Data was cleaned and validated manually then analyzed using Software Package for Social Sciences (IBM-SPSS) version 22. Descriptive statistics (frequency tables and summary indices) were generated. Chi Square was used to test and determine any significant association between knowledge and attitude towards HCT and p value was set at 0.05 significance level.
Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethics Committee of Imo State University Teaching Hospital Orlu. Permission from the selected school authorities and informed consents were obtained. All authors hereby declare that the study has therefore been performed in accordance with the ethical standards laid down in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki.
Three hundred copies of the questionnaire were administered and were completely and correctly filled giving a response rate of 100%.
Majority of the respondents were female (55.3%) and within the ages of 16-18 years (67.7%) with most belonging to the Christian faith (93.3%) of Igbo ethnic extraction (96.7%) (
Almost all of the respondents were aware of HIV/AIDS (99%). All and most of the respondents that were aware of HIV/AIDS respectively, indicated that the school (100%) and television (95%) were amongst their sources of information. Only about 23% of those aware, indicated that friends and relatives were sources of awareness.
More than three quarters of the respondents aware of HIV/AIDS, knew that
Variable | Category | Frequency (%) (N = 300) |
---|---|---|
Age (years) | 13 - 15 | 67 (22.3) |
16 - 18 | 203 (67.7) | |
18 - 19 | 30 (10.0) | |
Sex | Female | 166 (55.3) |
Male | 134 (44.7) | |
Religion | Christian | 280 (93.3) |
Non-Christian | 20 (6.7) | |
Ethnicity | Igbo | 290 (96.7) |
Non-Igbo | 10 (3.3) |
the mode of transmission were sexual intercourse (87%) and sharing injections (82%) while as many as 7 to 18% of those aware, indicated that sharing toilet (7%), eating with infected person (8%), sharing towels/handkerchief (17%) and mosquito bites (18%) were also modes of transmission. Close to one quarter of the respondents aware of HIV/AIDS, were not aware of the associated high risks behaviour (23%). Of those aware of the associated high risks, a majority indicated that unprotected sex (72%) was high risk but only 7% indicated that intravenous drug use was. More than half of the respondents (54.6%) either did not know or indicated that condom use cannot prevent HIV infection. Also, only about half and close to half of the respondents respectively, indicated that HIV can be treated (50%) but not cured (47%) (
Most of the respondents were aware of HCT (92%). Of those aware, all and most of the respondents respectively indicated that the school (100%) and the media (94%) were their sources of information. A majority of the respondents aware of HCT did not know any location for HCT services (65%) but, most knew that HCT is provided by health clinics (94%). Though a majority of the respondents aware of HCT indicated that, you seek HCT services at any time (67%), about 8 to 12% also indicated that, you seek HCT services for medical fitness certification and only when, one is feeling sick. A majority of the respondents aware of HCT, interpreted a positive HIV test to mean that the person definitely has AIDS (42%) while the interpretation of about 18% was that, the person will definitely die of the disease (
Most of the respondents (93%) reported that, they had not been counselled and tested for HIV infection (
A majority of the respondents had a poor level of the overall knowledge of HCT services (61%) (
Variable | Category | Frequency (%) |
---|---|---|
Awareness of HIV/AIDS (n = 300) | Yes | 298 (99.3) |
No | 2 (0.7) | |
*Source of information on HIV/AIDS (n = 298) | School | 298 (100.0) |
Television | 283 (95.0) | |
Radio | 190 (63.8) | |
Health workers | 127 (42.6) | |
Church | 120 (40.3) | |
Newspaper | 111 (37.2) | |
Friends/Relatives | 69 (23.2) | |
*Mode of HIV/AIDS Transmission (n = 298) | Sexual intercourse | 261 (87.6) |
Sharing injections | 245 (82.2) | |
Blood transfusion | 211 (70.8) | |
Barbing salon | 185 (62.1) | |
Injections from medicine stores | 183 (61.4) | |
Breastfeeding by infected mother | 180 (60.4) | |
Infected mother to unborn child | 176 (59.1) | |
Circumcision | 162 (54.4) | |
Kissing | 157 (52.7) | |
Manicure/pedicure | 154 (51.7) | |
Mosquito bites | 54 (18.1) | |
Skin tattooing | 52 (17.4) | |
Share towels/ handkerchief | 50 (16.8) | |
Eating with infected person | 24 (8.1) | |
Sharing toilet | 21 (7.0) | |
Touching an infected person | 5 (1.7) | |
Awareness of high risk behaviours associated with HIV/AIDS (n = 298) | Yes | 229 (76.8) |
No | 69 (23.2) | |
*High risk behaviours (n = 229) | Unprotected sex | 165 (72.1) |
Multiple sexual partners | 118 (51.5) | |
Homosexuality | 71 (31.0) | |
Alcoholism | 61 (26.6) | |
Receiving injections from stores | 58 (25.3) | |
Intravenous drug users | 16 (7.0) | |
Smoking | 12 (5.2) | |
HIV prevention using condoms (n = 300) | Yes | 136 (45.3) |
No | 46 (15.3) | |
Don’t know | 118 (39.3) | |
*Management of HIV/AIDS (n = 298) | Treatment is available | 149 (50.0) |
HIV cannot be cured | 141 (47.3) | |
No treatment available | 132 (44.3) | |
HIV vaccination available | 57 (19.1) |
*Multiple responses.
Variable | Category | Frequency (%) |
---|---|---|
Awareness of HCT (n = 300) | Yes | 275 (91.7) |
No | 25 (8.3) | |
*Source of HCT Information (n = 275) | School | 275 (100.0) |
Media (print/electronic) | 258 (93.8) | |
Health workers | 127 (46.2) | |
Church | 120 (43.6) | |
Friends/relatives | 69 (25.1) | |
Awareness of any HCT location (n = 275) | Yes | 96 (34.9) |
No | 179 (65.1) | |
*Where to seek for HCT (n = 275) | Health clinic | 259 (94.2) |
School | 36 (13.1) | |
Home | 13 (4.7) | |
Church | 11 (4.0) | |
*When to seek for HCT (n = 275) | At any time | 184 (66.9) |
After casual sex | 75 (27.3) | |
Only before marriage | 68 (24.7) | |
Having multiple sex partners | 64 (23.3) | |
After sexual rape | 43 (15.6) | |
Only when feeling sick | 35 (12.7) | |
For medical fitness certificate | 23 (8.4) | |
*Interpretation of a positive HIV test (n = 275) | Person definitely has AIDS | 116 (42.2) |
HIV infected but may not have AIDS | 109 (39.6) | |
Definitely had unprotected sex with infected person | 53 (19.3) | |
Will definitely die of disease | 50 (18.2) |
*Multiple responses.
Most of the respondents aware of HCT felt that everyone should perform HCT (94%) and the majority of the respondents’ reason was to know their HIV status (59%). The majority of those aware of HIV/AIDS felt that, the most important reason that will make them not test for HIV, is the likelihood that they are not exposed to HIV (37%) while about 12% felt, it was the fear of testing positive. The majority of respondents aware of HCT either felt that, they would not change or were not sure that, they would change their lifestyle after receiving HCT (67%). A majority of the respondents aware of HIV/AIDS felt that, if they were tested positive, they would seek medical treatment and avoid infecting others, while about 17% felt that they would seek spiritual care (
A majority of the respondents had a poor level of overall attitude towards HCT services (70%) (
The level of overall knowledge of HCT was significantly associated with the level of overall attitude towards HCT among the respondents (p < 0.000). (
This study assessed the Knowledge, Attitude and the Prevalence of HIV Counselling and Testing among senior secondary in-school adolescents and it revealed that the majority of the respondents had a poor level of overall knowledge and attitude towards HCT with a very low prevalence of HCT uptake. It further revealed that the overall level of knowledge among the respondents was significantly associated with the overall level of attitude towards HCT.
In the present study, the awareness of HIV/AIDS among the respondents was high and it was observed that the school was the most important source of information followed by the media, specifically the television. This was similar to a Cameroonian study by Haddison et al. [
Variable | Category | Frequency (%) |
---|---|---|
Do you feel that everyone | Yes | 258 (93.8) |
should perform HCT (n = 275) | No | 17 (6.2) |
*Why do you feel that everyone should perform HCT (n = 258) | To know status of self | 153 (59.3) |
For early detection and treatment commencement | 128 (49.6) | |
Increase knowledge of HIV/AIDS | 106 (41.1) | |
Help improve acceptance of people living with HIV/AIDS | 72 (27.9) | |
Not sure | 9 (3.5) | |
What singular reason will make you feel like not testing for HIV (n = 298) | The likelihood that I am not exposed | 109 (36.5) |
Lack of interest in knowing status | 75 (25.2) | |
Not knowing where to do HCT | 69 (23.2) | |
Fear of testing positive | 36 (12.1) | |
Not sure | 9 (3.0) | |
Do you feel you would change lifestyle after receiving HCT (n = 275) | Yes | 90 (32.7) |
No | 86 (31.3) | |
Not sure | 99 (36.0) | |
*What do you feel should be done if you are found to be HIV positive (n=298) | Should seek medical treatment and avoid infecting others | 196 (65.8) |
Should take No action | 101 (33.9) | |
Should seek spiritual care | 51 (17.1) | |
Should indulge in smoking, alcohol or commit suicide | 18 (6.0) | |
Should go about infecting others | 13 (4.4) |
*Multiple responses.
Variable | Poor level Attitude (%) | Good level Attitude (%) | Total (%) | χ2 | df | p-value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Level of overall | ||||||
Knowledge | 12.30 | 1 | 0.000* | |||
Poor | 141 (77.5) | 41 (22.5) | 182 (100) | |||
Good | 69 (58.5) | 49 (41.5) | 118 (100) | |||
Total | 210 (70.0) | 90 (30.0) | 300 (100) |
*Significant.
information was mainly from the school followed by the media. Other studies also reported a high level of HIV/AIDS awareness [
In spite of the high level of awareness observed in the present study, there is a need to improve the comprehensive knowledge of HIV among the adolescents, as a relatively sizeable proportion of the respondents still had misconceptions of HIV/AIDS transmission; for example, where some respondents reported that sharing toilet, eating with infected persons, sharing towels/ handkerchiefs and mosquito bites were the modes of HIV transmission and also, where only a small proportion of the respondents were aware of intravenous drug use as a high risk behaviour, with more than half of the respondents either not knowing or having reported that, condom use cannot prevent HIV infection. These misconceptions about HIV transmission among the respondents were also observed in other studies [
HCT is one of the main strategies for reducing the transmission of HIV, providing access to preventive services and reinforcing preventive messages on HIV. It may, in addition, also reduce risky behavioral tendencies among people who have received a HCT and are HIV negative [
Generally, the prevalence of HCT uptake among young people in a community or region seems to be dependent on the impact of HIV disease, public policies and the degree of public health efforts. This may explain to some extent, why there are varying degrees of HCT uptake amongst them, across regions. Nevertheless, any strategy that improves knowledge and a positive attitude towards HCT among the young people especially the adolescents within a youth friendly, non-judgmental and confidential environment, will also be fundamentally important and beneficial in improving uptake; because, any increase in HCT knowledge and positive attitude during the adolescents’ period, will definitely be facilitated by the effect of peer influence.
Furthermore, the study by Haddison et al. reported that, the uptake of HCT was significantly associated with knowledge and attitude towards HCT. Though the present study found that, the level of overall knowledge was significantly associated with the level of overall attitude, there were observed knowledge and attitudinal gaps. These gaps were further highlighted in the present study, where it was observed that, a majority of the respondents had a poor level of overall knowledge and attitude, which could also, have contributed to the low uptake of HCT observed among the respondents.
In spite of the fact that most of the respondents in the present study were aware of HCT, the gaps were obvious, for example, where a majority of the respondents did not know of any HCT location, with up to one quarter of them, having reported that HCT should be sought only before marriage and also, when more than one third of the respondents felt that, being tested for HIV is not needed since they are unlikely to be exposed. A similar attitude was observed in a study among secondary school students by Tarkang et al. [
In-school adolescents, a subgroup of different developmental levels and behavioral risks, have in common some form of parental or guardian supervision. In spite of this, they are exposed to risky behavioral tendencies within the context of inadequate knowledge and poor social values which further exposes them to the risk of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases. The in-school adolescents are poorly equipped to handle these situations, not only because they are faced with socio-political and environmental challenges of uptake of preventive and treatment measures such as HCT, they lack comprehensive knowledge and the appropriate attitude towards these measures. So improving knowledge and attitude of adolescents towards HCT will close the knowledge and attitudinal gaps and form the basis for the implementation of adolescent tailored strategies that address their socio-political and environmental challenges and consequently encourage and improve the voluntary and confidential uptake of HCT.
We thank all the participants in this study and the research assistants who helped during the data collection.
All the authors participated in the study.
The authors hereby declare that there are no competing interests.
There was no external source of funding.
Iwu, A.C., Chineke, H.N., Diwe, K.C., Duru, C.B., Uwakwe, K.A., Azuike, E.C., Madubueze, U.C., Abejegah, C., Ndukwu, E.U. and Ohale, I. (2017) Knowledge, Attitude and the Prevalence of HIV Counselling and Testing among Secondary In-School Adolescents in Orlu Local Government Area, Imo State, Nigeria. World Journal of AIDS, 7, 77-91. https://doi.org/10.4236/wja.2017.72008