Needs for a Curricular Change in Primary and Secondary Education From the One Health Perspective: A Pilot Study on Pneumonia in Schools
Author
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Marchant, Francisca
Author
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Sánchez, María Pilar
Author
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Duprat, Ximena G.
Author
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Mena, Alejandro
Author
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Sjoberg Herrera, Marcela
Author
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Cabal, Soledad
Author
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Figueroa, Daniela P.
Admission date
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2022-04-25T19:08:38Z
Available date
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2022-04-25T19:08:38Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Frontiers in Public Health November 2021 Volume 9 Article 654410
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Identifier
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10.3389/fpubh.2021.654410
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/185100
Abstract
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This is the first pilot study on alternative conceptions and obstacles pertaining to pneumonia in adolescents of different school vulnerability indexes. Countries with low socioeconomic levels are disproportionately affected, with Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) being the second-most affected area in the world, after sub-Saharan Africa. In spite of this fact, pneumonia is not included as an important component within the contents of the microbiology curriculum unit in the natural science school program. Therefore, we wanted to study how students knew about this topic by putting One Health into action by building and validating qualitative and quantitative questionnaires, put together by different experts in pedagogy, didactics, microbiology, and veterinary to find out what students knew about pneumonia and their misconceptions about it. A total of 148 students (in 8th and 9th grade) participated in this survey. The results reveal that no statistically significant differences between the different scholar grades (p = 0.3360 Pearson chi(perpendicular to)2) or genders (p = 0.8000 Fisher's exact test) presented higher or lower School Vulnerability Index (SVI). Regardless of the social stratum or the level of vulnerability of the students, they have heard about this disease primarily through their family/relatives, maintaining a superficial notion of the disease, learning wrong ideas about microorganisms and treatments that can contribute to the risk to public health.
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Patrocinador
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research grant CONICYT/FONDECYT/REGULAR 1171004
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Frontiers Media
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States