Completed Site - Nanjiang Village

Profile

Details

Geographic location

Nanjiang Village, Shuikou Township, Liping County, Qiandongnan Miao and Dong Autonomous Prefecture, Guizhou Province

Ethnic minority

Dong

Annual household income

RMB1,830

Common natural disaster

Fire

Number of subgroups in village

3

Number of households in village

314

Total population in village

1,442

Specific Public Health Issues

Similar to other localities in China, almost all adult males in the village consume alcohol and are medium to heavy smokers. Health literacy regarding the adverse health impacts of alcohol consumption, tobacco smoking and second-hand smoking is low, and cessation success rates are low as well.

There is severe littering along the riverside and burning of waste including plastics and pesticide containers is also carried out beside the river. There is no proper precautions taken during waste burning.

The most common infectious diseases are tuberculosis, hepatitis and influenza. Most of the villagers have not been vaccinated for tetanus.

Food supply and consumption

Alcohol use

Smoking

Smoking cessation

Water hygiene and problems

Waste management

Vaccination

Infectious diseases

Disaster profile

Fire and flooding are the most common disasters experienced; the latter with increased frequency due to climate change. Most houses are built of wood and power failures are common, which may contribute to the frequent outbreaks of fire. Disaster preparedness literacy needs to be improved in this village, as most villagers do not recognise the importance of preparing disaster emergency kits and first aid equipment at home.

Fire

Flooding

Disaster preparedness

Climate change

 

Nanjing village figure 1

 A dangerous house being reconstructed

 

Nanjiang village figure 2

 Crowed houses in the village

 

Photo Gallery 

In the Field

Health Needs Assessment

The purpose of this trip is to conduct a health needs assessment in all the subgroups in Nanjiang Village.

A total of 66 household interviews were conducted. To capture a fuller picture of the socio-demographic characteristics and access to health care services, gender-specific focus group discussion sessions and interviews with key informant (including the village head and village doctors) were also conducted.

Some of the potential public health issues identified include, but not limited to, the following: dietary habits among children, food choice, food preservation, waste disposal, sanitation of water and indoor air pollution.

Health Intervention

In total, 23 staff members and students from CUHK and HKU joined the trip, which benefited 180 participants.

  Health intervention topics:

    Waste management
    Fire control
    Food nutrition

 

Health Evaluation

Fifteen staff members and field trainees were involved in this trip and two sessions of interventions were conducted. A total of 102 households were successfully interviewed for evaluating the effectiveness of the two-year programme and the intervention.

Health intervention topics:
Food hygiene and ORS
Alcohol consumption
Disaster preparedness (Flooding & electric fire)

 

Village Stories from Team Volunteers

It is not my first visit to rural village, but the very first time for me to try understanding thoroughly what the villagers need before doing intervention. In my previous visit to a rural village in Guangaxi, my partners and I organized a five days learning programme in a primary school. Although we have a joyful memory with the kids, the project is not sustainable nor inspiring. To certain extent, I believe that we brought disturbance to their livings.

In the Nanjiang Village project, we first have a general picture of the village and identify the major health challenges. The trip gives us a glance on how modernization affects villagers’ living environment. With increasing uptake of plastic products, waste management of non-degradable rubbish becomes a growing challenge to rural villages. For more, we see how building culture of Dong minority becomes a disaster risk. We also notice the problem of left-behind elderlies. The health need assessments provide us an insight in a research basis of what to help, whom to help, how to help and to what extent we should help. The intervention trip to Nanjiang Village will be even more challenging. Hopefully we can offer help which best fits the villagers in the upcoming future.

                                                                                                                ----Lee Lee

Map