Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.

The aim of this study was to identify the predisposing and enabling factors affecting mothers' hygiene behaviour in relation to childhood diarrhoeal diseases. Qualitative data were gathered by naturalistic observation of 12 mothers and focus group discussions involving 32 mothers. Mothers with...

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Main Authors: O. Rauyajin, V. Pasandhanatorn, V. Rauyajin, S. Na-nakorn, J. Ngarmyithayapong, C. Varothai
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9706
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spelling th-mahidol.97062018-02-27T11:28:07Z Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand. O. Rauyajin V. Pasandhanatorn V. Rauyajin S. Na-nakorn J. Ngarmyithayapong C. Varothai Mahidol University Medicine The aim of this study was to identify the predisposing and enabling factors affecting mothers' hygiene behaviour in relation to childhood diarrhoeal diseases. Qualitative data were gathered by naturalistic observation of 12 mothers and focus group discussions involving 32 mothers. Mothers with children less than 2 years of age in both urban and rural areas of Suphanburi, a central province of Thailand, were sampled. Twelve local terms describing five different types of diarrhoea were identified. Childhood diarrhoea was classified into two groups depending upon perceived causes: contagious and preventable, and not contagious and unpreventable. To prevent diarrhoea in children, mothers reported that they avoid "taboo" food, avoid breastfeeding with "hot" milk and visit local healers for a herbal paste treatment that is applied to the child's throat. Most mothers did not wash their hands before preparing milk or after disposal of children's faeces. However, they did wash their hands after cleaning the child following the child's defecation, and after their own defecation. Our findings suggest that health education programmes should utilize local terminology and work to counter common misunderstandings regarding childhood diarrhoeal disease and its prevention. Knowledge of the predisposing and enabling factors identified in this study will assist in the development of effective implementation programmes. 2018-02-27T04:28:07Z 2018-02-27T04:28:07Z 1994-03-01 Article Journal of Diarrhoeal Diseases Research. Vol.12, No.1 (1994), 25-34 02538768 2-s2.0-0028391214 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9706 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=0028391214&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
O. Rauyajin
V. Pasandhanatorn
V. Rauyajin
S. Na-nakorn
J. Ngarmyithayapong
C. Varothai
Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
description The aim of this study was to identify the predisposing and enabling factors affecting mothers' hygiene behaviour in relation to childhood diarrhoeal diseases. Qualitative data were gathered by naturalistic observation of 12 mothers and focus group discussions involving 32 mothers. Mothers with children less than 2 years of age in both urban and rural areas of Suphanburi, a central province of Thailand, were sampled. Twelve local terms describing five different types of diarrhoea were identified. Childhood diarrhoea was classified into two groups depending upon perceived causes: contagious and preventable, and not contagious and unpreventable. To prevent diarrhoea in children, mothers reported that they avoid "taboo" food, avoid breastfeeding with "hot" milk and visit local healers for a herbal paste treatment that is applied to the child's throat. Most mothers did not wash their hands before preparing milk or after disposal of children's faeces. However, they did wash their hands after cleaning the child following the child's defecation, and after their own defecation. Our findings suggest that health education programmes should utilize local terminology and work to counter common misunderstandings regarding childhood diarrhoeal disease and its prevention. Knowledge of the predisposing and enabling factors identified in this study will assist in the development of effective implementation programmes.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
O. Rauyajin
V. Pasandhanatorn
V. Rauyajin
S. Na-nakorn
J. Ngarmyithayapong
C. Varothai
format Article
author O. Rauyajin
V. Pasandhanatorn
V. Rauyajin
S. Na-nakorn
J. Ngarmyithayapong
C. Varothai
author_sort O. Rauyajin
title Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
title_short Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
title_full Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
title_fullStr Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
title_full_unstemmed Mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in Suphanburi, Thailand.
title_sort mothers' hygiene behaviours and their determinants in suphanburi, thailand.
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9706
_version_ 1763490588854845440