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West Indian med. j ; 50(Suppl 5): 28, Nov. 2001.
Artigo em Inglês | MedCarib | ID: med-149

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Jamaica has long been considered to be a homophobic society. The aim of this survey was to examine the attitudes of the Jamaican populance towards homosexuality, thus shedding light on the important issue of homosexuality, disclosure of one's sexual preference and the relationship to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. METHODS: There have been several subjective reports on the issue of homosexuality in Jamaica. Many of these reports have suggested that Jamaica is not truly a homophobic society. No objective study on attitudes towards homosexuality in Jamaica has been done to date; this is an attempt in that regard. A survey was conducted in the Kingston and St.Andrew region. A questionnaire consisting of 17 knowledge and attitude items with six items to determine demographic data was prepared. This was administered to every third person in 6 designated areas, ensuring that equal numbers of males and females aged 16 years and over were polled. RESULTS: The analysis indicates that the majority of those surveyed thought that the homosexuality lifestyle was unaccepatable. Of significance, views varied depending on the level of educational attainment: 100 percent of persons with primary level education found homosexuality unacceptable in contrast with 76 percent of those with teritiary level education with a similar opinion (p=0.028). There was a generally negative attitude towards befriending an acknowledged homosexual or having such persons in positions of authority. Many participants agreed that homosexual partners should have access to social services, including insurance plans, with 37 percent in outright agreement and 21 percent remaining neutral. There was a dramatic decrease in the number of persons who believed that HIV was solely a homosexual disease (13 percent) in contrast with the results of a 1989 survey conducted by the Ministry of Health (81 percent). CONCLUSION: Despite changing global opinions of the homosexual lifestyles, several biases still remain within the Jamaican society. These conditions force homosexuals to remain ensconced within the cloak of the more acceptable heterosexual lifestyle, which may have significant social and health implications. (AU)


Assuntos
Humanos , Masculino , Homossexualidade , Atitude , Jamaica , Interpretação Estatística de Dados , Viés , Variações Dependentes do Observador , Viés de Seleção
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