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Health Educ Res ; 7(3): 391-401, 1992 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10148744

ABSTRACT

This study of urban, multi-ethnic children was undertaken to explore the relationships between age, cognitive developmental capability (termed 'cognitive maturity') and accuracy of information about health problems. A total of 299 children in the first, second and third grades from six public and one private school in New York City were individually interviewed using an open-ended set of questions. Findings indicated that having accurate health information is not the same as comprehending the abstract internal nature of the 'facts'. Results supported Piaget's levels of cognitive development applied to the area of health. Findings also showed that age is a better predictor of children's accuracy about health information than their cognitive maturity. The findings underscore the need for those providing health education to place emphasis on the cognitive abilities of children and not to mistake recitation of factual information for understanding of conceptual elements of a health problem.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Cognition , Health Education , Health Promotion , Psychology, Child , Analysis of Variance , Child , Curriculum , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , New York City , Students/psychology , Urban Population
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