Are sexual and reproductive health and rights taught in medical school? Results from a global survey
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John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Abstract
Our aim was to investigate the inclusion of sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) topics in medical curricula and the perceived need for, feasibility of, and barriers to teaching SRHR. We distributed a survey with questions on SRHR content, and factors regulating SRHR content, to medical universities worldwide using chain referral. Associations between high SRHR content and independent variables were analyzed using unconditional linear regression or χ2 test. Text data were analyzed by thematic analysis. We collected data from 219 respondents, 143 universities and 54 countries. Clinical SRHR topics such as safe pregnancy and childbirth (95.7%) and contraceptive methods (97.2%) were more frequently reported as taught compared with complex SRHR topics such as sexual violence (63.8%), unsafe abortion (65.7%), and the vulnerability of LGBTQIA persons (23.2%). High SRHR content was associated with high-income level (P = 0.003) and low abortion restriction (P = 0.042) but varied within settings. Most respondents described teaching SRHR as essential to the health of society. Complexity was cited as a barrier, as were cultural taboos, lack of stakeholder recognition, and dependency on fees and ranking. © 2022 The Authors. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics.
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Gender equality, Health equity, Medical education, Sexual and reproductive health and rights, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Reproductive health, Reproductive rights, Schools, medical, Sexual health, Surveys and questionnaires, Article, Childbirth, Contraceptive behavior, Curriculum, Feasibility study, Health survey, Highest income group, Human, Human rights, Illegal abortion, Independent variable, Infertility therapy, Knowledge, Lgbtqia+ people, Medical school, Qualitative analysis, Quantitative analysis, Questionnaire, Sexual violence, Stakeholder engagement, Taboo, Text messaging, Thematic analysis, Undergraduate education, Vulnerable population, Women's rights