HEALTH AND HYGIENE EDUCATION
Every Monday the students are taught a different health and
hygiene topic. The subjects are very basic and cover such
things as; the importance of using a toilet, washing your hands,
food hygiene, drinking only clean water; and the causes of the
main illnesses in the villages, such as diarrhoea, respiratory
infections, etc.

The students are encouraged to go home and tell their parents
what they have learnt. The feedback that we get from the
teachers regarding this is very encouraging. They report
that many people within the village of Prasat Char are beginning
to adopt better hygiene practices and are gaining a better
appreciation of the importance of health and sanitation issues.
All of our students have been given toothbrushes and taught
basic dental hygiene. Out of a class of 40 students only 4
owned toothbrushes.
All
of our students also receive two school uniforms. Some of
the children literally only had one set of clothes. How could we
teach them about personal hygiene when they had to wear the same
clothes every single day?
Each year we provide each student with two white tops and two
navy blue skirts or trousers/shorts. The reason we give
them white tops and blue bottoms is because this is the uniform
that children are required to wear at the government school.
(Without the required uniform they cannot attend the government
school.)
The uniforms we provide the students with are second hand and
are imported from richer Asian countries. We have found
that the second hand uniforms are of a much better quality and
therefore last much longer than the new uniforms available in
the Siem Reap markets. They also cost considerably less.
As
part of our ongoing health and hygiene education the students
are constantly encouraged to wash their hands with soap after
using the toilet. In Cambodia, the biggest killers of
young children are respiratory infections and diarrhoea. In
fact, in Cambodia, 38% of deaths in children under the age of 5
can be attributed to diarrhoeal diseases and pneumonia.
It has been shown that the simple act of
hand-washing with soap can lead to a 50% reduction in these
illnesses.
(Sources: World Health Organisation, UNICEF’s State of the
World Children Report,
International NGO
Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP).)