Social Determinants of Health, the Family, and Children’s Personal Hygiene: A Comparative Study
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Ramos Morcillo, Antonio Jesús; Moreno Martínez, Francisco José; Hernández Susarte, Ana María; Hueso Montoro, César; Ruzafa Martinez, MaríaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Child behaviour Child nursing Child protection Family care Inequalities in health School health services
Date
2019-11-26Referencia bibliográfica
Ramos-Morcillo, A. J., Moreno-Martínez, F. J., Hernández Susarte, A. M., Hueso-Montoro, C., & Ruzafa-Martínez, M. (2019). Social Determinants of Health, the Family, and Children’s Personal Hygiene: A Comparative Study. International journal of environmental research and public health, 16(23), 4713.
Abstract
Habits of personal hygiene are mostly acquired during childhood, and are, therefore,
influenced by one’s family. Poor hygiene habits are a risk factor for preventable disease and social
rejection. Social Determinants of Health (SDH) consist of contextual factors, structural mechanisms,
and the individual’s socioeconomic position, which, via intermediary determinants, result in inequities
of health and well–being. Dysfunctional family situations may, therefore, be generated by an unequal
distribution of factors determining SDH. Little attention has been paid to the influence of the family
on personal hygiene and the perception of social rejection in children. We designed a study to examine
differences in personal hygiene and in the perception of social rejection between children in reception
centers and children living in a family setting. A validated questionnaire on children’s personal
hygiene habits was completed by 51 children in reception centers and 454 children in normal families.
Hygiene habits were more deficient among the children in reception centers than among the other
children in all dimensions studied. Deficient hygiene habits were observed in the offspring of families
affected by the main features of social inequality, who were more likely to perceive social rejection
for this reason and less likely to consider their family as the greatest influence on their personal
hygiene practices.