Teaching minority children hygiene: investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Teaching minority children hygiene : investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam. / Rheinländer, Thilde; Samuelsen, Helle; Dalsgaard, Anders; Konradsen, Flemming.

In: Ethnicity and Health, Vol. 20, No. 3, 2015, p. 258-272.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rheinländer, T, Samuelsen, H, Dalsgaard, A & Konradsen, F 2015, 'Teaching minority children hygiene: investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam', Ethnicity and Health, vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 258-272. https://doi.org/10.1080/13557858.2014.921887

APA

Rheinländer, T., Samuelsen, H., Dalsgaard, A., & Konradsen, F. (2015). Teaching minority children hygiene: investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam. Ethnicity and Health, 20(3), 258-272. https://doi.org/10.1080/13557858.2014.921887

Vancouver

Rheinländer T, Samuelsen H, Dalsgaard A, Konradsen F. Teaching minority children hygiene: investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam. Ethnicity and Health. 2015;20(3):258-272. https://doi.org/10.1080/13557858.2014.921887

Author

Rheinländer, Thilde ; Samuelsen, Helle ; Dalsgaard, Anders ; Konradsen, Flemming. / Teaching minority children hygiene : investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam. In: Ethnicity and Health. 2015 ; Vol. 20, No. 3. pp. 258-272.

Bibtex

@article{346e25400d05406387d81aa61a165514,
title = "Teaching minority children hygiene: investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam",
abstract = "Objectives. Ethnic minority children in Vietnam experience high levels of hygiene- and sanitation-related diseases. Improving hygiene for minority children is therefore vital for improving child health. The study objective was to investigate how kindergarten and home environments influence the learning of hygiene of pre-school ethnic minority children in rural Vietnam. Design. Eight months of ethnographic field studies were conducted among four ethnic minority groups living in highland and lowland communities in northern Vietnam. Data included participant observation in four kindergartens and 20 homes of pre-school children, together with 67 semi-structured interviews with caregivers and five kindergarten staff. Thematic analysis was applied and concepts of social learning provided inputs to the analysis. Findings. This study showed that poor living conditions with lack of basic sanitation infrastructures were important barriers for the implementation of safe home child hygiene. Furthermore, the everyday life of highland villages, with parents working away from the households resulted in little daily adult supervision of safe child hygiene practices. While kindergartens were identified as potentially important institutions for improving child hygiene education, essential and well-functioning hygiene infrastructures were lacking. Also, hygiene teaching relied on theoretical and non-practice-based learning styles, which did not facilitate hygiene behaviour change in small children. Minority children were further disadvantaged as teaching was only provided in non-minority language. Conclusions. Kindergartens can be important institutions for the promotion of safe hygiene practices among children, but they must invest in the maintenance of hygiene and sanitation infrastructures and adopt a strong practice-based teaching approach in daily work and in teacher's education. To support highland minority children in particular, teaching styles must take local living conditions and caregiver structures into account and teach in local languages. Creating stronger links between home and institutional learning environments can be vital to support disadvantaged highland families in improving child health",
keywords = "Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, Minority Groups, Hygiene, Child health, child health, kindergarten, hygiene, sanitation",
author = "Thilde Rheinl{\"a}nder and Helle Samuelsen and Anders Dalsgaard and Flemming Konradsen",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1080/13557858.2014.921887",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "258--272",
journal = "Ethnicity and Health",
issn = "1355-7858",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Teaching minority children hygiene

T2 - investigating hygiene education in kindergartens and homes of ethnic minority children in northern Vietnam

AU - Rheinländer, Thilde

AU - Samuelsen, Helle

AU - Dalsgaard, Anders

AU - Konradsen, Flemming

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Objectives. Ethnic minority children in Vietnam experience high levels of hygiene- and sanitation-related diseases. Improving hygiene for minority children is therefore vital for improving child health. The study objective was to investigate how kindergarten and home environments influence the learning of hygiene of pre-school ethnic minority children in rural Vietnam. Design. Eight months of ethnographic field studies were conducted among four ethnic minority groups living in highland and lowland communities in northern Vietnam. Data included participant observation in four kindergartens and 20 homes of pre-school children, together with 67 semi-structured interviews with caregivers and five kindergarten staff. Thematic analysis was applied and concepts of social learning provided inputs to the analysis. Findings. This study showed that poor living conditions with lack of basic sanitation infrastructures were important barriers for the implementation of safe home child hygiene. Furthermore, the everyday life of highland villages, with parents working away from the households resulted in little daily adult supervision of safe child hygiene practices. While kindergartens were identified as potentially important institutions for improving child hygiene education, essential and well-functioning hygiene infrastructures were lacking. Also, hygiene teaching relied on theoretical and non-practice-based learning styles, which did not facilitate hygiene behaviour change in small children. Minority children were further disadvantaged as teaching was only provided in non-minority language. Conclusions. Kindergartens can be important institutions for the promotion of safe hygiene practices among children, but they must invest in the maintenance of hygiene and sanitation infrastructures and adopt a strong practice-based teaching approach in daily work and in teacher's education. To support highland minority children in particular, teaching styles must take local living conditions and caregiver structures into account and teach in local languages. Creating stronger links between home and institutional learning environments can be vital to support disadvantaged highland families in improving child health

AB - Objectives. Ethnic minority children in Vietnam experience high levels of hygiene- and sanitation-related diseases. Improving hygiene for minority children is therefore vital for improving child health. The study objective was to investigate how kindergarten and home environments influence the learning of hygiene of pre-school ethnic minority children in rural Vietnam. Design. Eight months of ethnographic field studies were conducted among four ethnic minority groups living in highland and lowland communities in northern Vietnam. Data included participant observation in four kindergartens and 20 homes of pre-school children, together with 67 semi-structured interviews with caregivers and five kindergarten staff. Thematic analysis was applied and concepts of social learning provided inputs to the analysis. Findings. This study showed that poor living conditions with lack of basic sanitation infrastructures were important barriers for the implementation of safe home child hygiene. Furthermore, the everyday life of highland villages, with parents working away from the households resulted in little daily adult supervision of safe child hygiene practices. While kindergartens were identified as potentially important institutions for improving child hygiene education, essential and well-functioning hygiene infrastructures were lacking. Also, hygiene teaching relied on theoretical and non-practice-based learning styles, which did not facilitate hygiene behaviour change in small children. Minority children were further disadvantaged as teaching was only provided in non-minority language. Conclusions. Kindergartens can be important institutions for the promotion of safe hygiene practices among children, but they must invest in the maintenance of hygiene and sanitation infrastructures and adopt a strong practice-based teaching approach in daily work and in teacher's education. To support highland minority children in particular, teaching styles must take local living conditions and caregiver structures into account and teach in local languages. Creating stronger links between home and institutional learning environments can be vital to support disadvantaged highland families in improving child health

KW - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

KW - Minority Groups

KW - Hygiene

KW - Child health

KW - child health

KW - kindergarten

KW - hygiene

KW - sanitation

U2 - 10.1080/13557858.2014.921887

DO - 10.1080/13557858.2014.921887

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24875851

VL - 20

SP - 258

EP - 272

JO - Ethnicity and Health

JF - Ethnicity and Health

SN - 1355-7858

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 113183712