Team:Arizona State/International
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<h1>Guatemala & Hygiene Lesson Plan</h1> | <h1>Guatemala & Hygiene Lesson Plan</h1> | ||
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+ | <li>The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) aim to reduce child mortality by two-thirds before 2015. Diarrhea is the second leading cause of deaths in children under five years of age. In Guatemala, approximately 60% of deaths in children fewer than five years of age are attributed to diarrhea (PAHO, 2007). | ||
+ | <li>The WHO in partnership with UNICEF issued a report in 2009 (<em>Diarrhoea: Why children are still dying and what can be done</em>) addressing the importance of prevention and management of diarrheal diseases to improving child survival. The report highlighted that diarrhea is prevalent in developing countries due to a lack of safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation, bad hygiene, poor health, and poor nutrition status. | ||
+ | <li>In addition, the report held that delivering life-saving treatment was important in reducing child deaths but that progress could only be made by focusing on prevention through immunizations and by addressing factors that lead to the diarrheal disease. | ||
+ | <li>Prevention included washing hands with soap and maintaining good hygiene. In addition, emphasis was placed on community involvement-from members of the population to healthcare professional- in health prevention. | ||
+ | </ul> | ||
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</body> | </body> |
Revision as of 05:45, 25 October 2012
Guatemala & Hygiene Lesson Plan
- The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) aim to reduce child mortality by two-thirds before 2015. Diarrhea is the second leading cause of deaths in children under five years of age. In Guatemala, approximately 60% of deaths in children fewer than five years of age are attributed to diarrhea (PAHO, 2007).
- The WHO in partnership with UNICEF issued a report in 2009 (Diarrhoea: Why children are still dying and what can be done) addressing the importance of prevention and management of diarrheal diseases to improving child survival. The report highlighted that diarrhea is prevalent in developing countries due to a lack of safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation, bad hygiene, poor health, and poor nutrition status.
- In addition, the report held that delivering life-saving treatment was important in reducing child deaths but that progress could only be made by focusing on prevention through immunizations and by addressing factors that lead to the diarrheal disease.
- Prevention included washing hands with soap and maintaining good hygiene. In addition, emphasis was placed on community involvement-from members of the population to healthcare professional- in health prevention.
| Lesson plan (PDF)
|
| [http://www.flickr.com/photos/asuigem/sets/72157631847676902 School photos] |