Literature DB >> 1738805

Healthy children ready to learn: an essential collaboration between health and education.

A C Novello1, C Degraw, D V Kleinman.   

Abstract

The "Healthy Children Ready to Learn" initiative starts with the underlying concept that health is a critical partner to optimum education. All children have a right to be healthy. At a minimum, this right assumes promoting optimum use of available and effective preventive measures, such as ensuring compliance with immunization recommendations; promoting measures to prevent injuries; ensuring opportunities to identify disease and disabilities early; and providing prompt treatment when needed. Families must receive the support and assistance they need to raise healthy and educated children. Activities directed toward National Education Goals and the related National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives can advance progress toward school readiness, focus attention and available resources on needed programs and services, and thus help the nation in achieving its goal of having all children arriving at school each day healthy, well nourished, and ready to learn. To realize these goals and objectives, the two critical systems of greatest importance to children, those providing health services and education, need to collaborate, not only among themselves, but also with social services. A range of critical health problems will require our attention if the goals are to be met, such as availability of prenatal care, infant mortality, inadequate nutrition during pregnancy or early childhood, or both, disease prevention by immunization, infants who have been exposed to drugs, fetal alcohol syndrome, and the emotional and mental disorders of early childhood, to name a few. At any one time, any family may be in need of appropriate services. To address the health and well-being of their young children, a continuum of appropriate, accessible services must be available in the community. The first steps toward successful achievement of the readiness goal will require the identification of health, education, and social service programs that serve young children and their families, and the creation of a climate that fosters innovative and effective collaboration between programs at the Federal and State levels, especially as it pertains to the community. Policies and programs should be built around the needs of families. In this regard, the critical role that parents play in shaping a healthy environment conducive to school readiness must be recognized as a key element in shaping the strategies that should help in achieving the readiness goal. Similarly important is the need to engage professional organizations and other private sector groups involved with health, education, and other children's issues to work with government and families to achieve the school readiness goal and its related health objectives.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1738805      PMCID: PMC1403595     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Health Rep        ISSN: 0033-3549            Impact factor:   2.792


  2 in total

Review 1.  Child nutrition: objectives for the decade.

Authors:  P L Splett; M Story
Journal:  J Am Diet Assoc       Date:  1991-06

2.  The need for prenatal care in the United States: evidence from the 1980 National Natality Survey.

Authors:  S Singh; A Torres; J D Forrest
Journal:  Fam Plann Perspect       Date:  1985 May-Jun
  2 in total
  10 in total

1.  Toward a healthy high schools movement: strategies for mobilizing public health for educational reform.

Authors:  Jessica Ruglis; Nicholas Freudenberg
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2010-07-15       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Factors promoting or potentially impeding school success: disparities and state variations for children with special health care needs.

Authors:  Christina Bethell; Christopher B Forrest; Scott Stumbo; Narangerel Gombojav; Adam Carle; Charles E Irwin
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2012-04

3.  School outcomes of children with special health care needs.

Authors:  Christopher B Forrest; Katherine B Bevans; Anne W Riley; Richard Crespo; Thomas A Louis
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2011-07-25       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  Injury Prevention Activities in US Schools, School Health Policies and Practices Survey 2014.

Authors:  Gabrielle F Miller; Lauren Wilson; Ketra Rice; Lara DePadilla; Melissa Mercado-Crespo; Sherry E Jones
Journal:  J Sch Health       Date:  2022-04-11       Impact factor: 2.460

5.  Is the health and wellbeing of university students associated with their academic performance? Cross sectional findings from the United Kingdom.

Authors:  Walid El Ansari; Christiane Stock
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2010-02-11       Impact factor: 3.390

6.  Barriers and Facilitators to Sustaining School Health Teams in Coordinated School Health Programs.

Authors:  Karen Cheung; Catherine A Lesesne; Catherine N Rasberry; Elizabeth Kroupa; Deborah Fisher; Leah Robin; Seraphine Pitt Barnes
Journal:  Health Promot Pract       Date:  2016-04-19

Review 7.  Cross-sector collaborations in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander childhood disability: a systematic integrative review and theory-based synthesis.

Authors:  Anna Green; Michelle DiGiacomo; Tim Luckett; Penelope Abbott; Patricia Mary Davidson; Joanne Delaney; Patricia Delaney
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2014-12-18

8.  How Schools Affect Student Well-Being: A Cross-Cultural Approach in 35 OECD Countries.

Authors:  Elena Govorova; Isabel Benítez; José Muñiz
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-03-25

9.  Differences in Health-Related Physical Fitness and Academic School Performance in Male Middle-School Students in Qatar: A Preliminary Study.

Authors:  Souhail Hermassi; Lawrence D Hayes; Nilihan E M Sanal-Hayes; René Schwesig
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-03-22

10.  Research on the Influence of Informal Employment on Residents' Happiness in China: Empirical Analysis Based on CLDS Data.

Authors:  Guangyan Chen; Feng Qiu; Xiaowen Dai; Hongxing Lan; Jiahao Song
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 4.614

  10 in total

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