Dental students' knowledge of AIDS and HIV infection in Helsinki, Finland, and in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/00016359109005890Keywords:
Clinical symptoms, questionnaire, risk groupsAbstract
AbstractThe purpose of this investigation was to study the knowledge about HIV infection and AIDS among dental students in Helsinki, Finland, and in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. All respondents knew that HIV is not transmitted via hand-shaking, drinking water, or breathing air. More than half of the students in both countries did not know that HIV can be transmitted via breast-feeding. A higher proportion of students in Dar es Salaam than in Helsinki believed that all HIV-positive persons will get AIDS. Tanzanians recognized the early symptoms of HIV infection better than the Finnish students. Many students in both countries did not mention bisexual men as belonging to the high-risk group. Most of the dental students in Dar es Salaam but only one in five in Helsinki believed that dentists belong to the at-risk group.
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica publishes original research papers as well as critical reviews relevant to the diagnosis, epidemiology, health service, prevention, aetiology, pathogenesis, pathology, physiology, microbiology, development and treatment of diseases affecting tissues of the oral cavity and associated structures including papers on cause and effect or explanatory/associative relationships for experimental or observational studies.