Effectiveness of a health promotion intervention to address determinants of child neglect in a disadvantaged community in Sri Lanka

Child neglect is a form of child maltreatment and it is a neglected area of research. As similar to other forms of maltreatment, neglect also results in negative health outcomes for children. Child neglect is concentrated in disadvantaged communities. The community-centered health promotion approach...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health, population and nutrition population and nutrition, 2021-11, Vol.40 (1), p.48-48, Article 48
Hauptverfasser: Rathnayake, Nadeeka, De Silva Weliange, Shreenika, Guruge, G N Duminda
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Child neglect is a form of child maltreatment and it is a neglected area of research. As similar to other forms of maltreatment, neglect also results in negative health outcomes for children. Child neglect is concentrated in disadvantaged communities. The community-centered health promotion approach empowers communities to identify and address determinants of perceived health issues. This study aimed to implement a health promotion intervention to enable a disadvantaged community to address determinants of child neglect and evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention. A quasi-experimental study design was used. Two disadvantaged communities in Anuradhapura District, Sri Lanka with similar socio-demographic characteristics were purposively selected as the experimental and control study settings. The mothers who have at least one child in the age range 5-18 years were included in the sample. The sample included 42 mothers from the experimental group and 44 mothers from the control group. The elder children of mothers in the experimental group were selected to be the agents of change. A health promotion intervention was implemented only with the experimental setting. The steps of the intervention included; (1) identifying prevention of child neglect as a goal, (2) understanding the determinants, (3) analyzing determinants and identifying actions and (4) implementing and modifying the actions. The total study duration was 1 year, with the intervention taking an average of 6 months. Data were collected at both pre and post-intervention phases from mothers and children through interviewer-administered questionnaires. Mothers of the experimental group improved their knowledge on child neglect significantly in comparison to the control group (p 
ISSN:2072-1315
1606-0997
2072-1315
DOI:10.1186/s41043-021-00267-6