Knowledge and Attitudes of Undergraduate University Students in Oman With Regard to People Living With HIV
Ruba Al Bahri, Aaisha Al-Balushi, Abdullah Balkhair

TL;DR
This study explores the knowledge and attitudes of university students in Oman toward people living with HIV, revealing gaps in understanding and stigmatization.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into HIV-related knowledge and stigma among Omani university students, particularly comparing medical and non-medical students.
Findings
Medical students showed higher HIV knowledge and lower stigma compared to non-medical students.
Male students had significantly lower stigma scores than female students.
Despite good knowledge in 72% of students, 43.4% exhibited stigmatizing attitudes toward people living with HIV.
Abstract
Background: There is scarce literature from the region pertinent to university students’ HIV-related knowledge, perception, attitudes, and behavior toward people living with HIV. Moreover, university students in Oman are remarkably uninformed about HIV, resulting in misconceptions and stigmatization among students. Objective: This research aimed to examine HIV-related knowledge and attitudes of undergraduate medical and non-medical university students toward people living with HIV in Oman. Methods:This was a qualitative cross-sectional study using convenience sampling to recruit participants from nine colleges at Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman. An online questionnaire composed of 17 Likert scale statements examining students’ knowledge and nine Likert scale statements exploring students’ attitudes was used. A knowledge score ≥ the mean was considered good knowledge, whereas a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
