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Safe-Sex Knowledge, Sexual Behavior, and Drug Use A thesis

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Table 15. <strong>Knowledge</strong> of where Respondents learned about HIV/AIDS<br />

Mean/Proportion St<strong>and</strong>ard Deviation Range<br />

School .42 .49 0-1<br />

Doctors .39 .49 0-1<br />

Church .05 .22 0-1<br />

Friends .32 .47 0-1<br />

Pamphlets/ flyers .32 .47 0-1<br />

Billboards .07 .26 0-1<br />

Boy or girl friends .11 .32 0-1<br />

Role Models/Mentors .07 .26 0-1<br />

Websites .14 .35 0-1<br />

Television .26 .44 0-1<br />

Radio .07 .26 0-1<br />

Newspaper/magazine .18 .38 0-1<br />

Parent/adult relative .06 .25 0-1<br />

Sister/brother/teen .02 .14 0-1<br />

relative<br />

Educational program .28 .45 0-1<br />

<strong>Sex</strong> partner-not boy or .03 .18 0-1<br />

girl friend<br />

Community/social<br />

group<br />

.27 .45 0-1<br />

Table 16 presents information on where respondents would like to find more<br />

information regarding HIV/AIDS. The top informational places are educational programs<br />

(22%) schools, social groups, <strong>and</strong> television (21 %), websites (17 %), <strong>and</strong> doctors (16 %).<br />

26

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