Effectiveness of premarital sexual counselling program on sexual satisfaction of recently married couples

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Abstract

Background: Through its ability to address and remove fear and misunderstanding and the resulting sexual reluctance and related problems, pre-marital sexual education and counselling can contribute to sexual satisfaction. Methods: This quasi-experimental research conducted in a pre-test-post-test control group design aimed to examine the effectiveness of nursing interventions on a premarital counselling program and its impacts on the sexual satisfaction of couples (36 couples in the experimental group and 35 couples in the control group). Results: Although no difference was detected between the experimental and control groups in terms of the level of knowledge on pre-test point averages, the difference between them in terms of post-test knowledge gain averages was statistically significant. Approval rates for sexual myths in the pre-test were 27.87% in the experimental group and 37.03% in the control group; in the post-test they were 23.51% and 36.66% respectively. In the experimental group, 80.6% of the women and 63.9% of the men, and in the control group, 77.1% of the women and 71.4% of the men were established as having a problem-free sexual life. Conclusions: It was also discovered that levels of sexual satisfaction were shown to be higher among women and men in the experimental group who had attended premarital sexual counselling education than the women and men in the control group. A recommendation to encourage engaged couples to attend premarital sexual counselling is made based on the findings. It is thought that an intervention plan prepared within the framework of the Information, Motivation, Behavioural Skills theoretical model will help nurses guide recently-married couples to greater sexual satisfaction. © CSIRO 2009.

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Keywords

Premarital counselling, Sexual counselling, Sexual satisfaction, adult, article, controlled study, female, human, knowledge, major clinical study, male, married man, married woman, nursing intervention, pretest posttest control group design, quasi experimental study, sexual behavior, sexual counseling, sexual education, sexual satisfaction, statistical significance, theoretical model, Adult, Family Planning Services, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Libido, Male, Marriage, Nurse's Role, Personal Satisfaction, Research Design, Sex Counseling, Sex Education, Spouses, Adult, Male, knowledge, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Sexual satisfaction, premarital counselling, Libido, married man, 610, nursing intervention, Personal Satisfaction, Sex Education, Nurse's Role, quasi experimental study, sexual behavior, sexual counseling, Sex Counseling, male, Humans, controlled study, Interpersonal Relations, human, Marriage, Spouses, Sexual counselling, statistical significance, Practice, sexual education, Health Knowledge, adult, theoretical model, article, pretest posttest control group design, Premarital counselling, major clinical study, female, Research Design, Attitudes, Family Planning Services, Female, married woman, sexual counselling, sexual satisfaction

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03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

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OpenCitations Citation Count
16

Volume

6

Issue

3

Start Page

222

End Page

232
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CrossRef : 14

Scopus : 22

PubMed : 5

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Mendeley Readers : 35

SCOPUS™ Citations

22

checked on Jun 06, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

19

checked on Jun 06, 2026

Page Views

55

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Sustainable Development Goals

GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING3
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
GENDER EQUALITY5
GENDER EQUALITY