SOCIO-CULTURAL DETERMINANTS OF SEXUAL HEALTH LITERACY WITHIN EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENTS: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE

Автор
Дата
2026-02-26ISBN
978-601-385-193-8Аннотации
Sexual health literacy is increasingly conceptualized as a socially embedded and culturally
mediated competence rather than solely an informational capacity. This study examines how cultural regulation shapes
sexual health literacy among individuals with experience studying in universities. Survey data from 87 respondents
indicate moderate levels of self-perceived sexual health literacy (M = 3.69) and relatively high communicative comfort
(M = 3.97), while 63.2% acknowledged that cultural or religious norms restrict access to sexual health information.
Thematic analysis identified communicative discomfort, religious considerations, traditional norms, linguistic
sensitivity and preference for gender-specific formats as key determinants. The findings suggest that sexual health
literacy develops within socially negotiated communicative boundaries. The results provide empirical support for
culturally adapted pedagogical models within university-related educational environments.
