Department of Environmental Health, Institute for Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Hanoi Medical University, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Glob Health Action. 2013 Apr 24;6:1-12. doi: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.20288.
In Vietnam, initiatives have been started aimed at increasing the practice of handwashing with soap (HWWS) among primary schoolchildren. However, compliance remains low.
This study aims to investigate responses to a teacher-centred participatory HWWS intervention in a multi-ethnic population of primary schoolchildren in northern rural Vietnam.
This study was implemented in two phases: a formative research project over 5 months (July-November 2008) and an action research project with a school-based HWWS intervention study in two rural communes during 5 months (May, September-December 2010). Based upon knowledge from the formative research in 2008, schoolteachers from four selected schools in the study communes actively participated in designing and implementing a HWWS intervention. Qualitative data was collected during the intervention to evaluate the responses and reaction to the intervention of teachers, children and parents. This included semi-structured interviews with children (15), and their parents (15), focus group discussions (FGDs) with schoolchildren (32) and school staff (20) and observations during 15 HWWS involving children.
Observations and interview data from children demonstrated that children were visibly excited and pleased with HWWS sessions where teachers applied active teaching methods including rewards, games and HWWS demonstrations. All children, schoolteachers and parents also viewed the HWWS intervention as positive and feasible, irrespective of ethnicity, gender of schoolchildren and background of schoolteachers. However, some important barriers were indicated for sustaining and transferring the HWWS practice to the home setting including limited emphasis on hygiene in the standard curriculum of schools, low priority and lack of time given to practical teaching methods and lack of guidance and reminding HWWS on a regular basis at home, in particular by highland parents, who spend most of their time working away from home in the fields. Access to soap and water at the household level did not seem a barrier for the uptake of HWWS but continuous access to these might be a challenge at schools.
This study demonstrated that it is feasible to engage teachers and implement active teaching methods for behaviour change of HWWS in a group of multi-ethnic primary schoolchildren without the need for major investments in water and hygiene infrastructures. However, in those areas there was limited transfer of practice from school promotion to home. Continuous access to soaps at schools needs to be invested.
在越南,已经启动了一些举措,旨在增加小学生使用肥皂洗手(HWWS)的习惯。然而,依从率仍然较低。
本研究旨在调查在越南北部农村多民族小学生中实施以教师为中心的参与式 HWWS 干预的反应。
本研究分两个阶段进行:2008 年 7 月至 11 月进行了为期 5 个月的形成性研究项目,2010 年 5 月至 12 月在两个农村公社进行了为期 5 个月的以学校为基础的 HWWS 干预研究。基于 2008 年形成性研究的知识,来自研究公社的四所选定学校的教师积极参与设计和实施 HWWS 干预。在干预期间收集定性数据,以评估教师、儿童和家长对干预的反应和反应。这包括对儿童(15 名)及其父母(15 名)进行半结构化访谈、对学童(32 名)和学校工作人员(20 名)进行焦点小组讨论以及在 15 次 HWWS 中进行观察,儿童参与。
儿童的观察和访谈数据表明,当教师采用包括奖励、游戏和 HWWS 示范在内的积极教学方法时,儿童明显感到兴奋和高兴。所有儿童、学校教师和家长也认为 HWWS 干预是积极和可行的,无论种族、儿童性别和学校教师背景如何。然而,一些重要的障碍表明,将 HWWS 实践持续转移到家庭环境中是困难的,包括学校标准课程中对卫生的重视有限、实际教学方法的优先级和时间安排较低以及缺乏定期在家中指导和提醒 HWWS,特别是高地父母,他们大部分时间都在离家很远的田间工作。家庭层面获得肥皂和水似乎不是接受 HWWS 的障碍,但在学校持续获得这些可能是一个挑战。
本研究表明,无需对水和卫生基础设施进行重大投资,即可让教师参与并实施积极的教学方法,以改变一组多民族小学生的 HWWS 行为。然而,在这些地区,从学校推广到家庭的实践转移有限。需要对学校持续提供肥皂进行投资。