magistrsko delo
Barbara Hrastar (Avtor), Martina Turk (Recenzent), Iztok Tomažič (Mentor)

Povzetek

Svetovni in slovenski problem obotavljanja in necepljenja otrok obstaja že dolgo časa. Na odločitev staršev o cepljenju otrok vpliva zaupanje v zdravstveni sistem in zdravstvene delavce, za ustrezno precepljenost pa je potrebno tudi znanje in pozitivno stališče do cepiv in cepljenja. Slednje se začne razvijati že pri otrocih, zato smo v tej magistrski nalogi želeli preveriti stališča in znanje dijakov gimnazije in srednje strokovne šole ter primerjati podatke glede na program šolanja, spol, letnik in v odvisnosti od tega ali dijaki navajajo, da so bili cepljeni proti otroškim boleznim ali ne. Znanje in stališča dijakov smo preverjali preko spletnega anketiranja 1KA, kjer smo objavili anketni vprašalnik s preizkusom znanja. S programom IBM SPSS smo pridobljene podatke statistično analizirali in pridobili rezultate, da je biološko znanje dijakov pomanjkljivo, saj so na manj kot polovico vprašanj odgovorili pravilno, in da imajo dijaki srednje strokovne šole manj znanja kot dijaki gimnazije. Stališča dijakov so v povprečju pozitivna. Dijaki so neopredeljeni do tematike, kdo bi moral odločati o cepljenju otroka ter farmacevtskih podjetij, ki promovirajo cepljenje. Več znanja in bolj pozitivna stališča glede na spol imajo fantje ter dijaki, ki so bili cepljeni. Najmanj znanja imajo dijaki, ki ne vedo ali so bili v otroštvu cepljeni ali ne.

Ključne besede

cepiva;cepljenje;znanje;stališča;srednješolci;magistrska dela;

Podatki

Jezik: Slovenski jezik
Leto izida:
Tipologija: 2.09 - Magistrsko delo
Organizacija: UL BF - Biotehniška fakulteta
Založnik: [B. Hrastar ]
UDK: 616-084
COBISS: 127256323 Povezava se bo odprla v novem oknu
Št. ogledov: 16
Št. prenosov: 7
Ocena: 0 (0 glasov)
Metapodatki: JSON JSON-RDF JSON-LD TURTLE N-TRIPLES XML RDFA MICRODATA DC-XML DC-RDF RDF

Ostali podatki

Sekundarni jezik: Angleški jezik
Sekundarni naslov: Upper secondary school students' attitude and knowledge about vaccines and vaccination
Sekundarni povzetek: The global and Slovenian problem of hesitation and non-vaccination of children has existed for a long time. Parents’ decision to have their children vaccinated is influenced by trust in the health care system and health care professionals, but adequate vaccination coverage also requires knowledge and a positive attitude toward vaccines and vaccination. Attitudes are influenced at a young age. For this reason, in this master’s thesis, we wanted to examine the attitudes and knowledge of secondary school students. We wanted to compare data according to school programme, gender, grade level and also according to whether students report having been vaccinated against childhood diseases or not. We checked students’ knowledge and attitudes through the 1KA online survey, in which we published a questionnaire with a test. We statistically analysed the obtained data using IBM SPSS. The results of our survey showed that students’ biological knowledge was insufficient. They answered less than half of the questions correctly. In addition, the students of the vocational upper secondary school have less knowledge than the students of the general upper secondary school (grammar school). On average, students' attitudes are positive; however, their attitude toward who should decide whether to vaccinate a child is unclear, as is their attitude toward pharmaceutical companies that promote vaccination. Regarding gender, males have more knowledge and more positive attitudes, and we observed the same pattern in positive attitudes for students who have been vaccinated. Students who do not know whether or not they were vaccinated in childhood have the least knowledge.
Sekundarne ključne besede: vaccines;vaccination;knowledge;attitude;students;master thesis;Cepljenje (medicina);Univerzitetna in visokošolska dela;
Vrsta dela (COBISS): Magistrsko delo/naloga
Študijski program: 0
Konec prepovedi (OpenAIRE): 1970-01-01
Komentar na gradivo: Univ. v Ljubljani, Biotehniška fak., Oddelek za biologijo
Strani: 1 spletni vir (1 datoteka PDF (X, 62 str., [5] str. pril.))
ID: 16800846