Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections, and its associated factors among students in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis study.

Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections, and its associated factors among students in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis study.

Publication date: Jul 24, 2024

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are illnesses mainly spread through unprotected sexual activity. There is a scarcity of aggregate evidence in Ethiopia. The aim of this review was to assess the pooled prevalence of STI, and its associated factors among students in Ethiopia to fill the aforementioned gap. We extensively searched the bibliographic databases of PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar to obtain eligible studies. Further screening for a reference list of articles was also done. The Microsoft Excel Spreadsheet was used to extract data, and Stata 17 was used for analysis. The PRISMA-guidline and Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment scale were used for quality appraisal. To check heterogeneity, the Higgs I2 and Cochran’s Q tests were employed. Sensitivity and subgroup analysis were implemented. To detect publication bias, Egger’s test and funnel plots were used. The pooled prevalence of STI among students in Ethiopia was 13. 6% with a 95% CI (10. 2, 17). Findings from sub group analysis based on student category shows that the pooled prevalence of STI were 14. 5% among University students, 14. 2% among college students and 10. 6% among high school students. Having multiple sexual partners (AOR 3. 31; 95% CI: 2. 40-4. 57), not using condoms during sexual intercourse (AOR 2. 56; 95% CI: 1. 72-3. 81), and having poor knowledge about sexually transmitted infections were 3. 08 times (AOR 3. 08; 95% CI: 1. 84-5. 15) significantly associated with STI. The pooled prevalence of STIs among students in Ethiopia was high, and factors like having multiple sexual partners, not using condoms during sexual intercourse, and having poor knowledge about sexually transmitted infections were significantly associated with STIs. Hence, reduce STIs among students, strengthening sexual and reproductive health services, raising awareness about transmission and prevention, and promoting consistent condom use through health information dissemination is crucial. Further qualitative studies are suggested to explore the barriers and facilitators of STI prevention.

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Concepts Keywords
Condoms Adolescent
Databases Ethiopia
Ethiopia Ethiopia
Google Female
Illnesses Humans
Male
Meta-analysis
Prevalence
Risk Factors
Sexual Behavior
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
STI
Students
Students
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH sexually transmitted infections
disease VO Gap
disease IDO quality
disease VO publication
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease VO Bacteria
disease VO Viruses
disease MESH syphilis
disease MESH gonorrhea
disease VO Chlamydia
disease MESH trichomoniasis
disease MESH communicable diseases
disease VO organization
disease VO report
disease MESH infections
drug DRUGBANK Vorinostat
drug DRUGBANK Ranitidine
disease MESH marital status
disease IDO history
disease MESH abortion history
disease MESH stillbirth
drug DRUGBANK Phenindione
disease MESH infertility
disease MESH cervical cancer
disease MESH urethral stricture
disease IDO country
disease MESH pus
disease IDO process
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
drug DRUGBANK Indoleacetic acid
drug DRUGBANK Trimebutine
disease MESH syndrome
disease MESH AIDS
disease VO time
disease MESH COVID 19
disease VO vaccine
disease MESH Morbidity
disease VO pregnant women
disease MESH Malaria
pathway KEGG Malaria
disease VO organ
disease MESH hepatitis
disease MESH herpes simplex
disease MESH emergency
disease IDO intervention
disease MESH HIV infection
disease MESH bacterial vaginosis
drug DRUGBANK Naproxen

Original Article

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