TY - JOUR
T1 - The effects of using fear in public aids education on the behaviour of homosexually active men
AU - Rosser, B. R.Simon
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1992/1/29
Y1 - 1992/1/29
N2 - AIDS Education is a wide ranging term which can embrace a number of different strategies to promote sexual behaviour change. This paper compares the behaviour of male homosexually active volunteers in two countries; one group being exposed to a fear based public education campaign (the Australian Grim Reaper Public AIDS Campaign, n = 77), the other group being cither exposed to a variety of gay sensitive, sexually positive material or allocated to a control group (in New Zealand, n = 159). At baseline, approximately 75% of both samples reporting engaging exclusively in safer sex behaviour. At follow-up, while the percentage of those practicing safer sex behaviour significantly increased to 83% in those exposed to the gay sensitive material and control, the prevalence of safer sex among those who experienced the fear based program, decreased dramatically to 47%. These findings, supported by previous research on the effects of fear, highlight the dangers of using fear based programs on the behaviour of those most at risk.
AB - AIDS Education is a wide ranging term which can embrace a number of different strategies to promote sexual behaviour change. This paper compares the behaviour of male homosexually active volunteers in two countries; one group being exposed to a fear based public education campaign (the Australian Grim Reaper Public AIDS Campaign, n = 77), the other group being cither exposed to a variety of gay sensitive, sexually positive material or allocated to a control group (in New Zealand, n = 159). At baseline, approximately 75% of both samples reporting engaging exclusively in safer sex behaviour. At follow-up, while the percentage of those practicing safer sex behaviour significantly increased to 83% in those exposed to the gay sensitive material and control, the prevalence of safer sex among those who experienced the fear based program, decreased dramatically to 47%. These findings, supported by previous research on the effects of fear, highlight the dangers of using fear based programs on the behaviour of those most at risk.
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U2 - 10.1300/J056v04n03_09
DO - 10.1300/J056v04n03_09
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84928835562
SN - 1931-7611
VL - 4
SP - 123
EP - 134
JO - International Journal of Sexual Health
JF - International Journal of Sexual Health
IS - 3
ER -