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Health Education Research, Vol. 14, No. 6, 817-830, December 1999
© 1999 Oxford University Press

Effects of an educational programme on adolescents with premenstrual syndrome

Janita P. C. Chau and Anne M. Chang

Department of Nursing, Sino Building, Chung Chi College, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong

An education program was developed and evaluated to determine its efficacy in increasing knowledge and decreasing the severity of symptoms of premenstrual syndrome (PMS). Participants from a sample of 94 schoolgirls aged between 14 and 18 years from four secondary schools in Hong Kong were assigned to either the experimental or control group. Immediately following the education program, the schoolgirls in the experimental group had significantly increased knowledge scores as measured by the Premenstrual Syndrome Knowledge Questionnaire. Three months following the education program, schoolgirls in the experimental group reported having a significant reduction in total PMS scores and three of the subscale scores as measured by a translated version of Abraham's Menstrual Symptom Questionnaire. In addition, no significant differences were found for the control group on pre-test and post-test PMS scores suggesting that the education program could have been the source of the reduction in PMS symptoms of the experimental group of young adolescents girls.


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West J Nurs ResHome page
W.-Y. Ip, J. P. C. Chau, A. M. Chang, and M. H. L. Lui
Knowledge of and Attitudes Toward Sex among Chinese Adolescents
West J Nurs Res, March 1, 2001; 23(2): 211 - 223.
[Abstract] [PDF]



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