1 / 16

e-Bug background research report

15-18 year olds. e-Bug background research report. Noralie Geessink Dr. Pia Touboul-Lundgren 21 November 2013. Table of contents. Target age group Educational structure Health information and provision Vaccination usage Antibiotic usage Teenage pregnancy rate Existing campaigns

dinahm
Télécharger la présentation

e-Bug background research report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 15-18 year olds e-Bug background research report Noralie Geessink Dr. Pia Touboul-Lundgren 21 November 2013

  2. Table of contents. • Target age group • Educational structure • Health information and provision • Vaccination usage • Antibiotic usage • Teenage pregnancy rate • Existing campaigns • Demographic information

  3. Target agegroup.

  4. Educationalstructure. Proportions of 15-18 year olds enrolled in education

  5. Educationalstructure. • ISCED 3 (upper secondary education) • An example:

  6. General versus vocationaleducation.

  7. Public versus private education.

  8. Possibilities to integrateantibiotic and vaccinationeducation. • Several pathways with chosen subjects • Only a few common subjects • Difficult to find common subjects in vocational/technical/ specialised/professional education • Vocational students possibly less knowledge • Science and biology • On average 20-40% of students attend (often only general education) • The UK: just around 7% per education year • Peer education • Various other subjects • E.g. geography, religion, health education, physical education. family education • Technical subjects: e.g. biotechnology, food industry • Extracurricular projects

  9. Antibiotics and vaccinationsalreadycovered in national curricula. • Mostly covered in scientific pathways (science, biology, natural science) • Saudi-Arabia and Cyprus • Only covered before upper secondary education • Vocational or technical education  less (detailed) covered • Two different resources • One specific for compulsory biology curriculum • One for students in a section without antibiotics and vaccinations within the compulsory education

  10. Health information and provision. • Teachers • Social media, TV, internet sources • Several existing educational resources • Mostly general websites for background information or biology subject material • GPs • 15-18 year olds with own responsibility or not enrolled in education • Awareness concerning their role • Developing a specific leaflet • Educational campaigns • Important for 15-18 year olds as well as their parents • Two-way education

  11. Vaccinationusage. • Different vaccination recommendations • Childhood coverage rates satisfactory in most countries (in spite of absence of obligation) • Decreasing trend in uptake rates among teenagers • Coverages of boosters or reminders • New vaccines, optional in most countries, e.g. meningococcal C or HPV vaccination • 15-18 year olds is an important target group for vaccination information • Prospective educational tool • Vaccinations could consist of several doses and all doses have to be given for immunity • 15-18 years old is a key age for booster vaccinations

  12. Antibioticusage. • (Illegal) over the counter antibiotic sales • Information leaflets GPs • Including meaningful information about appropriate antibiotic use specific for this age group • Catch-up antibiotics

  13. Teenagepregnancyrate. • Targeting 15-18 year olds as future parents

  14. Existingcampaigns. • Qu

  15. Demographicinformation. • Character diversity • Belgium: 3 languages • Proportions of ‘anti-vaccination groups’ in general could be explored to identify their relevance • Computer/internet access relatively high (especially in educational settings)

  16. Conclusion. • Educational venues usable • Different audiences • One specific tool for (compulsory biology curriculum in) scientific pathways in general education • More detailed resource to cover learning objectives • Peer education • One cross-curricular tool for all different pathways, technical and vocational schools • One specific tool to be used by GPs (or other health professionals) targeting young people not in education • Two-way education • Identify and specify possibilities to integrate antibiotic and vaccination education with taking into account areas outside science and cross-/extracurricular projects • Possibilities to reach 15-18 year olds not enrolled in education or enrolled in specialised, technical or vocational education should be specifically identified

More Related