Parenting in Vietnam
The Dynamics of Early Childhood Rearing in Vietnam: A Synthesis of Traditional Practices, Scientific Outcomes, and Modern Health System Integration

Huu Ho
I. Foundational Frameworks: Cultural Etiology of Vietnamese Infant Care
Vietnamese child-rearing practices are deeply embedded within a communal, hierarchical social structure guided by specific cultural and cosmological health beliefs. Understanding this framework is essential for analyzing both traditional behaviors and compliance with contemporary public health guidance.
A. Cultural Philosophy and Familial Hierarchy
Vietnamese families operate as robust support systems, providing essential emotional, financial, and social assistance to their members.1 This communal approach ensures that family members rely on mutual assistance, a factor particularly crucial in rural areas where localized support networks are primary.1 This integrated structure contrasts significantly with the individualized models often seen in Western societies.
Within this framework, the role of elders is paramount. They are highly respected and are expected to remain within the family unit for support and comfort.2 Based on the family’s socioeconomic status and lifestyle, elders assume vital practical roles, including preparing meals and, most critically, taking care of grandchildren while the parents are working.2 This intergenerational compact establishes a cycle of care: parents look after children when they are young, and children assume responsibility for parents when they reach old age.2 Because primary infant caregiving is often delegated to grandparents due to economic necessity, the elders become the gatekeepers and primary transmitters of traditional child-rearing norms. This structure minimizes the new mother’s isolation and provides a robust social safety net, which may effectively mitigate the psychological stresses, such as postpartum depression, commonly associated with the isolated nuclear family model.
B. Humoral Theory and Health Beliefs: The Essential Balance
Health practices in Vietnam are fundamentally influenced by the belief in the "hot" and "cold" qualities of food and medicine (both herbal and pharmaceutical), alongside the significant perceived importance of "wind".3 This humoral theory posits that the body must maintain a delicate balance between these elements. For example, an excess of "cold" food is traditionally believed to cause adverse conditions such as coughing and diarrhea.3
This framework functions as a primary filter through which medical decisions are made. Before seeking or complying with any course of treatment, Vietnamese individuals often assess the perceived effect of the intervention on their internal "hot/cold" balance.3 This has substantial implications for the integration of modern medicine. If a Western-prescribed therapy, such as an antibiotic or a nutritional supplement (like iron, which is clinically vital for maternal and infant health), is culturally perceived as disrupting this balance (e.g., being excessively "cold"), adherence may be low or the medication may be counteracted by traditional dietary adjustments. Consequently, public health initiatives cannot rely solely on the availability of modern care; their success hinges on the ability to respectfully navigate and align clinical protocols with the deep-seated cultural perception of bodily homeostasis.4
C. Traditional Pregnancy Precautions and Risk Perception
Traditional beliefs also govern prenatal behavior and risk assessment. Certain Vietnamese and Khmer women, for instance, may adhere to the belief that sitting in a door frame or on a step could cause obstructive labor.3 Similarly, sleeping late during the day may be believed to result in a large fetus.3
Crucially, traditional interpretation of physiological symptoms sometimes differs starkly from clinical necessity. Health professionals must be acutely aware of these beliefs, especially concerning danger signs. For instance, it is necessary to explicitly instruct women that ante-partum bleeding is a sign of a potentially serious problem requiring immediate emergency service attendance, as this condition may not be traditionally interpreted as an emergency.3 This discrepancy underscores the necessity for culturally sensitive health education that bridges traditional symptom interpretation with modern obstetric requirements.
II. The Practice of Postpartum Confinement (Kiêng Cữ): The Fourth Trimester
The postpartum period in Vietnam is strictly governed by Kiêng Cữ, or confinement, a practice recognized across many Asian cultures. This period is a critical phase for both the mother’s recovery and the neonate’s initial adjustment to the external world.
A. Definition and Duration of Confinement
Kiêng Cữ typically requires new mothers to remain indoors for a specified period, ranging from 30 to 100 days following birth, during which time they receive care and guidance from older relatives.5 This custom is deeply rooted in the need to protect the mother from external illnesses and restore her strength after labor, which is culturally perceived as a cold-draining event.
The successful completion of the minimum 30-day confinement period is marked by a significant social and ritual event: the Ngày Đầy Tháng, which translates to the “day of the full month”.6 This celebration serves multiple functions. It publicly validates the baby's health and survival and acts as the mother's symbolic re-entry into society after her intensive period of recovery.6
