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Title

Empowering adolescent girls through video-assisted self-defense teaching program in rural Gujarat, India

 

Authors

B. Mahalakshmi1, N. Sivasubramanian1,*, Limbachiya Jaiminkumar Bipinbhai1, Thakor Ankitaben Babuji1, M.R. Krishnamoorthy2 , Mothliya Prashviben Devajibhai1 & Jadav Kajalben Pravinbhai1

 

Affiliation

1Nootan College of Nursing, Sankalchand Patel University, Visnagar, Gujarat - 384315, India; 2Velammal college of Nursing, Madurai, Tamilnadu- 625009, India; *Corresponding author

 

Email

B Mahalakshmi - E-mail: mb.fn@spu.ac.in

N Sivasubramanian - E-mail: sn.fn@spu.ac.in

Limbachiya Jaiminkumar Bipinbhai -E-mail: jaimin582001@gmail.com

Thakor Ankitaben Babuji - E-mail: ankitathakor74@gmail.com

M.R. Krishnamoorthy - E-mail: krishnamoorthym.r@sriramchandra.edu.in

Mothliya Prashviben Devajibhai - E-mail: mothiliyaprashvi@gmail.com

Jadav Kajalben Pravinbhai - E-mail: kajaljadav2001@gmail.com

 

Article Type

Research Article

 

Date

Received July 1, 2024; Revised July 31, 2024; Accepted July 31, 2024, Published July 31, 2024

 

Abstract

Adolescent girls face myriad challenges impacting their mental health and well-being, necessitating empowerment through self-defense education. In contexts of prevalent gender-based violence, such education becomes imperative, particularly in countries like India. However, the influence of demographic factors on knowledge levels regarding self-defense techniques among adolescent girls remains uncertain. This study employed a one-group pre-test - post-test design to evaluate the impact of a video-assisted self-defense teaching program on adolescent girls in rural Gujarat, India. A sample of 100 girls from Mahesana district schools participated, with data collected via structured questionnaires administered pre and post-intervention. The intervention significantly enhanced participants' knowledge levels, with a remarkable increase in mean post-test scores compared to pre-test scores. Specifically, prior to the intervention, 45% of participants exhibited low knowledge levels, which improved to 19.5% post-intervention. Notably, 80.5% demonstrated excellent knowledge post-intervention. The study underscores the efficacy of a video-assisted self-defense teaching program in augmenting knowledge levels among adolescent girls in rural Gujarat. Despite demographic diversity, the intervention yielded consistent improvements, emphasizing its universal applicability.

 

Keywords

Adolescent girls, self-defense education, gender-based violence

 

Citation

Mahalakshmi et al. Bioinformation 20(7): 728-730 (2024)

 

Edited by

P Kangueane

 

ISSN

0973-2063

 

Publisher

Biomedical Informatics

 

License

This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. This is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.