Literature DB >> 15275179

Schools for health: Focus on health, education and the school-age child.

D A Bundy1, H L Guyatt.   

Abstract

Mortality in children under five years old has been dramatically reduced through successful programmes of immunization and control of diarrhoeal diseases. UNICEF estimates that some 90% of children in developing regions now survive to reach school age. These survivors face new and continuing threats to their health, which can affect their physical development and may also prevent them taking full advantage of their only opportunity for formal education. The physical and mental growth of the 1000 million school-age children today will influence how the world is shaped for coming generations. Yet the health problems of this age group have received little attention. Recognizing the importance of this age group, a workshop funded by the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation was held 10-13 November 1994 in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky, USA, to review what is known about the health of school-age children, what is or can be done to improve their health, and what steps must be taken to find ways to improve the health and educational achievement of this important segment of the world's population. Don Bundy and Helen Guyatt here report on the workshop, which had three major conclusions: (1) the school-age children of developing countries face health problems that remain neglected and poorly understood; (2) an important research need is to develop simpler means of monitoring the health status of school-age children and evaluating the impact of public health interventions in this age group; and (3) two strategies are available to address this public health problem. The first is to develop further and test programmes that appear, from available evidence and pilot studies, to offer effective means of improving the health of this age group at reasonable cost, and to be sustainable; and the second is, over a longer term, to develop the capacity within countries to assess the health problems of school-age children and devise cost-effective strategies to address these problems. This report attempts, in brief form, to survey what is known about the health status of school-age children, to discuss the possible benefits to health and learning that accrue from health interventions, and to suggest some avenues currently available for both research and application.

Entities:  

Year:  1996        PMID: 15275179     DOI: 10.1016/0169-4758(96)30011-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasitol Today        ISSN: 0169-4758


  12 in total

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Review 4.  Global epidemiology, ecology and control of soil-transmitted helminth infections.

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6.  Helminthiasis among School-Age Children and Hygiene Conditions of Selected Schools in Lafia, Nasarawa State, Nigeria.

Authors:  Eniola M Abe; Onyinye C Echeta; Akwashiki Ombugadu; Linus Ajah; Peter O Aimankhu; Akinola S Oluwole
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7.  The costs and cost-effectiveness of mass treatment for intestinal nematode worm infections using different treatment thresholds.

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9.  Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey.

Authors:  Mustafa Ulukanligil; Adnan Seyrek
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2003-09-03       Impact factor: 3.295

10.  The Prevalence of Soil-Transmitted Helminths and Associated Risk Factors among School Children at Sekela Primary School, Western Ethiopia.

Authors:  Addisu Tolera; Mebrate Dufera
Journal:  J Parasitol Res       Date:  2020-10-30
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