A content analysis of hand hygiene materials targeting elementary-age children

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Abstract

Millions of dollars have been spent on the design and dissemination of educational materials to improve handwashing to prevent infectious diseases. School-age children have been the focus of many of these efforts; yet little is known about the content of these materials. This study uses content analysis to examine the theoretical and motivational trends as well as the communication approach used in a sample of hand hygiene intervention materials targeting elementary-age children. Two trained coders analyzed 144 communication materials. Study results indicate that educational materials infrequently exhibit information consistent with theories of communication for behavior change, commonly use fear-based messaging, and rarely recommend using technology in the design of the interventions. Implications for future research and the design of more strategic, child-focused hand hygiene interventions are discussed.

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Quilliam, E. T., McKay, B. A., Lapinski, M. K., Viken, G., Plasencia, J., Wang, Z., & Fraser, A. (2018). A content analysis of hand hygiene materials targeting elementary-age children. Health Education Research, 33(6), 481–491. https://doi.org/10.1093/her/cyy033

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