Abstract

Week-nurseries and nurseries operating non-stop are an important part of child care, though they are a very small per cent of the total. An investigation of the social conditions of nursery-children and their families found that on the average all basic economic and social traits were unfavourable. Internal and external factors often disrupted the families: bad working, financial and housing conditions, and the low level of education of parents. Relatively often the families had a bad reputation, not infrequently in connection with alcoholism and other pathic circumstances. It was in the interest of the parents to place their children (even handicapped children) in this kind of nursery. The need for more social care for these children was stressed, and for other children who have no opportunity to be accepted in these nurseries and who live in similar conditions.

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