Cross-sectional study finds low knowledge and negative attitudes toward male infertility among undergraduates
A descriptive cross-sectional, mixed-method study assessed knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions of male infertility among 300 undergraduates at Osun State University. The population was predominantly female with a mean age of 20.99 ± 2.31 years. No specific intervention or comparator was reported; the study measured baseline characteristics.
The main results showed overall knowledge of male infertility was low, reported as 47.7%. More than half of respondents (52.3%) had a negative attitude toward male infertility. Statistical analysis indicated that attitude was a significant predictor associated with faculty (p=0.049), academic level (p=0.031), and having received formal education on male infertility (p=0.007). Effect sizes and absolute numbers for these associations were not reported.
Safety and tolerability data were not reported for this observational study. Key limitations include the cross-sectional design, which prevents causal inference, and uncertain generalizability beyond this single university population. Funding and conflicts of interest were not reported.
Practice relevance suggests a need to foster open dialogues and promote gender-inclusive narratives regarding male infertility. For clinicians, these findings highlight potential knowledge gaps and attitudinal barriers in a young adult population, but the evidence is observational and context-specific.