Acne Awareness and Perceptions among Female Paramedical Female Students at a Tertiary Care Hospital
Journal Title: Journal of Medical Research and Practice - Year 2017, Vol 6, Issue 2
Abstract
Background Acne vulgaris is one of the most common skin disease affecting adolescents, yet there is a paucity of information regarding the basic knowledge of acne. Objective The objective of the study is to evaluate the awareness, knowledge, beliefs and myths about acne among paramedical students at a tertiary care hospital. Methods Paramedical female students suffering from acne were asked to fill up a questionnaire about their knowledge about acne vulgaris and a total of 500 patients completed the questionnaire. Simultaneously, severity of acne was assessed using a Global Acne Grading System (GAGS). Results A positive family history of acne was elucidated from 30.8% patients. Out of 500 respondents, 24.8% patients believed that acne is a disease. A high percentage (63%) patients believed that acne is both a health and cosmetic problem, 21% thought it to be a health problem while 16% patients consider acne is only a cosmetic condition. According to a majority of patients (n = 270, 54%) thought they had an oily skin, 33% dry skin while 13% felt that they had oily skin at places while dry skin at other. The combination of an unhealthy diet, infection and poor hygiene were believed to cause acne in 60.4% patients. Unhealthy diet was the single most common implicated factor constituting 260 patients (52%) followed by poor hygiene (24.4%), infections (28%), hormonal factors (10.2%) and genetic factors (9%). When acquired about most common aggravating factors, diet was the common factor aggravating acne in which 47.4% patients believed that fried food could aggravate acne. Other factors were spicy food (40%), pickle (20.4%), peanuts (10.4%), chocolate (7%) and milk (2%). Premenstrual flare was noticed in 54% acne patients. Regarding acne severity grading, 323 patients (64.6%) had mild acne, 156 (31.2%) had moderate acne and 21 patients (4.2%) had severe acne. 14.8% felt depressed about acne, 13.2% were underconfident while 11.2% avoided party and social gathering because of acne. Television/internet (65%) was the most common source of information about acne followed by family physicians (44%), parents (29%), and friends (28%) and magazines (25%). Conclusion It can be concluded that despite having some basic knowledge about medical science, paramedical students had certain false beliefs and misconceptions about various aspects of acne, and there is a need for accessible, accurate, community-based education on the natural history of acne, pathogenesis, risk of sequelae, the effectiveness and expected duration of treatment, and the importanceof prompt medical attention.
Authors and Affiliations
Mudita Gupta
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