| Literature DB >> 21819558 |
Francesca Gallè1, Caterina Mancusi, Valeria Di Onofrio, Aniello Visciano, Vincenza Alfano, Roberto Mastronuzzi, Marco Guida, Giorgio Liguori.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Body art practices have emerged as common activities among youth, yet few studies have investigated awareness in different age groups of possible health complications associated with piercing and tattooing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21819558 PMCID: PMC3223796 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of the two student samples
| HIGH SCHOOLS | UNIVERSITIES | statistic | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean ± SD) | 16.1 ± 1.3 | 21.6 ± 4.1 | ||
| Gender (%)* | 4,557 (48.9) M | 2,052 (56.8) M | χ2 = 67.45 | < 0.0000001 |
| Pierced (%) | 2,923 (31.3) | 1,192 (33) | χ2 = 3.319 | 0.06849 |
| Gender of pierced (%)* | 910 M (31.1) | 376 M (31.5) | χ2 = 0.09446 | 0.7586 |
| Age at first piercing (mean ± SD) | 12.9 ± 2.5 | 15.9 ± 4.3 | F = 2.95 | < 0.0000001 |
| Tattooed (%) | 1,054 (11.3) | 886 (24.5) | χ2 = 357.6 | < 0.0000001 |
| Gender of tattooed (%)* | 534 M (50.6) | 311 M (35.1) | χ2 = 1.086 | 0.2991 |
| Age at first tattoo (mean ± SD) | 14.8 ± 2.5 | 17.6 ± 2.6 | F = 2.95 | 0.2228 |
| Interested to piercings | 1,638 (25.5) | 352 (14.5) | χ2 = 122.2 | < 0.0000001 |
| Interested to tattooing | 3,522 (42.5) | 690 (25.3) | χ2 = 412.9 | < 0.0000001 |
*: some interviewed did not respond.
Number (%) of high school and university students who knew possible health risks of body art practices
| HIGH SCHOOLS | UNIVERSITIES | χ2statistic | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious diseases (%) | 7,404 (79.4) | 3,148 (87.2) | 104.3 | < 0.0000001 |
| Hepatitis and HIV (%) | 259 (3.5) | 472 (14.9) | 450.9 | < 0.0000001 |
| Non-infectious diseases (%) | 4,292 (46) | 2,134 (59.1) | 510.3 | < 0.0000001 |
| Allergies, bleeding, and cysts (%) | 86 (2) | 64 (2.9) | 5765 | 0.016 |
Number (%) of tattooed and pierced youth belonging to the two groups who signed an informed consent and received information about health risks; for the latest group, the source of information is reported
| HIGH SCHOOLS | UNIVERSITIES | χ2statistic | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informed consent signed (%) | 239 (6.9) | 245 (15.3) | 87.56 | < 0.0000001 |
| Health risks information received (%) | 848 (24.7) | 914 (57.1) | 504.3 | < 0.0000001 |
| - through informed consent | 185 (21.8) | 223 (24.4) | ||
| - from the operator | 377 (44.4) | 414 (45.3) | 2.946 | 0.2293 |
| - from another source | 286 (33.7) | 277 (30.3) | ||
Numbers (%) of tattooed/pierced students belonging to the two groups who attended licensed facilities (a beautician or a licensed tattooist/piercer practice), observed the use of sterile/disposable instruments and reported complications (infectious or noninfectious)
| HIGH SCHOOLS | UNIVERSITIES | χ2statistic | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addressed to authorized facility (%) | 927 (27.0) | 1064 (66.5) | 836.9 | < 0.0000001 |
| - beautician | 276 (8) | 206 (12.8) | ||
| - tattooist/piercer | 651 (18.9) | 858 (53.6) | ||
| Sterile/disposable instruments (%) | 960 (27.9) | 1,126 (70.3) | 808.9 | < 0.0000001 |
| Complications suffered (%) | 234 (6.8) | 117 (7.3) | 0.4144 | 0.5198 |
| - infectious | 176 (75.2) | 22 (18.8) | ||
| - non-infectious | 58 (24.7) | 95 (81.1) | 100.9 | < 0.0000001 |