ECCQ Publications

Sexual and reproductive health literacy of culturally and linguistically diverse young people in Australia: a systematic review

Young people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds experience barriers accessing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) information and care. This systematic review, utilising a pre-determined protocol, performed according to PRISMA guide­lines, explored SRH knowledge, attitudes and information sources for young (16–24 years) culturally and linguistically diverse back­ground people living in Australia, to gain understanding of their sexual health literacy. CINAHL, Embase, MEDLINE, PubMed and Scopus were systematically searched with inclusion criteria applied to 216 articles. After title and abstract screening, backward/forward searching, and full-text review of 58 articles, 13 articles from eight studies were identified. Thematic analysis, guided by core con­structs from cultural care theory, identified three themes: (1) SRH knowledge varied by topic but was generally low; (2) young peo­ple’s attitudes and beliefs were influenced by family and culture; however, ‘silence’ was the main barrier to sexual health literacy; and (3) Access to SRH information was limited. To attain sexual health literacy and equitable access to culturally-congruent and respon­sive SRH information and care, there is a need for theory-informed strategies and policies that address the diverse social, cultural and structural factors affecting young culturally and linguistically diverse background people, especially the ‘silence’ or lack of open SRH communication they experience.

 

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