Health promotion approach for the control of food-borne parasitic zoonoses in Nepal: emphasis on an environmental assessment.

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2001-03-04
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Abstract
Green and Kreuter define health promotion as the use of both education and ecology to encourage and support living conditions conducive to good health. Their PRECEDE-PROCEED model delineates a practical way to cope with health problems using this definition. Applying PRECEDE to Nepal helps identify the steps needed to control the ever-increasing incidence of food-borne parasitic zoonoses (FBPZ) there and in other South Asian countries. In executing the first five steps of the model, we focused on behavioral and environmental assessments to find a method for controlling FBPZ. Through these two assessments, we identified the following behavioral and environmental objectives: establish a meat inspection system by 2003, establish training programs on safe meat production and selling practices by 2003, improve slaughterhouses and slaughtering practices by 2003. The educational and ecological assessments revealed that the necessary predisposing, reinforcing and enabling factors for appropriate control of FBPZ are present in Nepal, while an administration and policy assessment shows Nepal meets PRECEDE requirements through its recent meat inspection legislation. Although the data for each element of the PRECEDE-PROCEED model are limited in Nepal, they clearly tell us to move forward to the PROCEED stage to control FBPZ there as well as in all of South Asia.
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The Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health.
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Jimba M, Joshi DD. Health promotion approach for the control of food-borne parasitic zoonoses in Nepal: emphasis on an environmental assessment. The Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health. 2001 ; 32 Suppl 2(): 229-35