Children’s Perspectives on Health: What Makes Children Feel Good According to Themselves?
Abstract
The object of this study is to examine children’s perspectives on health and what elements
make them feel good. Health promoting contributions rarely emanate from children’s
perspectives but most often from a child perspective, what adults consider children need in
order to feel well. There are relatively few studies made from children’s viewpoints on health
- children should be made more involved in the shaping of health interventions. The study
was carried out at two nine-year compulsory schools in Western Sweden, 78 pupils aged 9
through 11years participated. To collect the material interviews was the principal source, and
the result is mainly supported by an analysis of the contents from 52 interviews. What the
children declared to be the most important element for health were relations. This
circumstance was stated in 88 percent of the interviews, and it was in substance the relations
to family and friends that were brought up. A condition to lift children’s perspectives is that
they are taken seriously, that their part-taking leads to influence and a real utilization of their
opinions. A conclusion from this study is that activities that handle health for children and
young people should consider children’s perspectives: partly through focusing the work on
promoting children’s social and familial relations, and partly to let the children participate
more in the final shape of contents and working methods.