Title: Coordinated School Health
1Coordinated School Health
- Train The Trainer Workshop
2Goals and Objectives
- GOAL Provide information and resources
- to assist in development or support for CSH in
each district. - Objectives
- Help fully understand the value of CSH
- Give understanding of laws
- Provide you with practical information, resources
and strategies to utilize in program planning and
implementation - Provide best practices in
- Assessment
- Recruitment of a CSH Leadership Team
- Organization and Planning based on SHAC
recommendations - Effective implementation and Evaluation
-
3Agenda
1. WELCOME/INTRODUCTIONS
2. WHAT IS COORDINATED SCHOOL HEALTH (CSH)?
3. WHAT IS CURRENTLY GOING ON?
4. HOW DO YOU DO CSH?
5. TEA APPROVED PROGRAMS
6. WHATS NEXT? ACTION PLAN
7. TAKING COORDINATION HOME
4Youth Risk Behaviors
- Tobacco Use
- Poor Food Choices and Inappropriate Portion Sizes
- Inadequate Physical Activity
- Alcohol and Drug Use
- Sexual Behaviors That Can Transmit HIV and other
STDs - Unintended Pregnancy
- Intentional and Unintentional Injuries, Often Due
to Violence
5National Trends Adults
6National Trends in Child Overweight
7Texas Health Data 2000-2002
African American
Hispanics
White/ Other
Girls
Boys
All
Body Mass Index Above the 95 percentile for age
and sex (2000-2002 Span Data)
8Rate of Childhood Overweight-Texas
- Table 2. Prevalence of overweight1 and at-risk-of
overweight2 in Texas school-age children between
2004 and 2005
9National Diabetes Trends
10National Diabetes Prevalence
1994
2004
11National Diabetes Ethnicity Trends
12Promoting Healthy Behaviors
- Refusal Skills
- Decision Making
- Goal Setting
- Communication
- Healthy Relationship Building
- Interest in Alternative Health Promotion
Activities
13What is Coordinated School Health?
14Introduction to CSH
- Effective CSH can
- Increase Academic Achievement
- Decrease Absenteeism and Drop-out Rates
- Reduce the Risk of Premature Death
- Decrease Health Care Costs
- Improve Economic Productivity and National
Security - Increase School/Community Partnerships to Address
the Health Needs in the Community
15CSH and the SHAC in Texas
- Mandated by Law
- Focus on the Whole Child
- Involve Coordination and Collaboration
- Enhance the School Health Efforts
- Increases Communication Between the School and
Community
16Why Coordinate?
17Comprehensive Health Education
- A planned, sequential, K-12 curriculum that
addresses physical, mental, emotional and social
dimensions of health. - Curriculum motivates and assists students to
maintain and improve health, prevent disease and
be good health consumers. - Incorporates the Texas Essential Knowledge in
Skills - Is taught by qualified and trained teachers.
18Physical Education
- Planned, sequential K-12 instruction that
promotes lifelong physical activity utilizing the
Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills - Designed to develop basic movement skills,
sports skills, and physical fitness as well as
to enhance mental, social, and emotional
abilities. - Is taught by qualified and trained physical
education teachers.
19Health Services
- Services provided to appraise, protect and
promote health. - Includes treatment of acute and chronic
conditions as well as preventive services,
referrals to primary health care providers and
education to students and staff. - Provided by a qualified and trained health care
practitioner or other allied health personnel.
20Nutrition Services
- Integration of nutritious, affordable, and
appealing meals nutrition education and an
environment that promotes healthy eating
behaviors for all children - Follow the U.S.D.A. and Texas Dept. of
Agriculture Guidelines - Services are provided by qualified and trained
child nutrition staff
21Counseling and Psychological Services
- Services provided to improve students mental,
emotional and social health. - May include individual and group activities that
assess, intervene and refer to appropriate
services. - Services are provided by qualified, trained
mental health professionals
22Healthy School Environment
- The physical and aesthetic surroundings and the
psychosocial climate and culture of the school. - The psychological environment that includes the
emotional and social conditions that affect the
well-being of students and staff.
23Health Promotion for Staff
- Assessment, education and fitness activities for
school faculty and staff - Designed to maintain and improve the health and
well-being of school staff who serve as role
models for children - Health promotion activities have improved
productivity, decreased absenteeism and better
moral in the school
24Family/Community Involvement
- Partnerships among schools, families,community
groups, and individuals - School Health Advisory Councils
- Increases awareness and support for the school
health program - Development of community resources to address
student health needs
25Best Practices In School Health
1
2
3
4
Active Leadership
Coordinated And Collaborative Approach
Safe and Nurturing Learning Environment
Commitment Of Time, Personnel, Resources
26Continuous Quality Improvement
The Journey Starts Here
Recruit
Organize
Evaluate
Assess
Plan
Implement
27CSH Leadership Team Process
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 4
Phase 3
Update and Evaluate
Identify
Recruit
Orient
28CSH Leadership Team Members
- Representative of a Component or
- Administration
- Committed to Improving School Health
- Willingness to Work on All Health Issues
- Demonstrates Leadership
- Willingness to Devote Time and Expertise
29Assessment
- Formal
- School Health Index
- On-Line
- Downloadable
- Hard Copy by Request from CDC
- School Health Policies and Practices
- Conducted Nationally
- Texas participates in the survey
- Downloadable questions to use in local districts
- Youth Risk Behavior Survey
- Downloadable from CDC
- Texas participates and data is available for state
30Assessment
- Formal-cont.
- Local Information
- Health Department
- County Statistics
- Local Law Enforcement Statistics
- Alcohol and Drug Abuse Council Data
- Other Local and Regional Data
31Assessment-Cont.
- Informal
- Student Surveys (with parental permission)
- Focus Groups
- Parent Surveys
- Trends seen in the medical and law enforcement
community - Other community or regional resource information
32Our School Districts Results
33Key Strategies for Success
- Develop mission and goals in collaboration with
the SHAC - Facilitate the CSH Leadership Team
- Communicate with the SHAC and Administration
- Keep everyone updated and celebrate success
- Formal reporting to SHAC and administration
34TEA Approved Programs
- Currently there are 4 programs that have been
approved by TEA - Bienstar
- CATCH
- Great Body Shop
- Healthy and Wise
- Others will be reviewed for approval
- School districts can submit their locally
developed CSH program for approval (it must meet
the criteria set out by TEA)
35Complimentary Actions
- Actions
- Assign representative from each dept. to project
team - Distributes survey to faculty
- Summarize results and draft report
- Actions
- Assign member to project team
- Get PTA to survey parents
- Analyze results
- Present report to school board
36Where Do We Go From Here?
- Identify top priorities based on
- assessment and teachable moments
- Utilize the SMART strategies for
- developing goals, objectives and activities
- Keep communication open with both
- SHAC and administration
- Celebrate success and tell your story to
- the community and other districts
37Coordinated School Health
- Thank You For Coming
- and
- Best Wishes on Coordinating School Health