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Comprehensive School Health: (CSH)

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Title: Comprehensive School Health (CSH): An Overview Author: Jane Poile Last modified by: cmacdoug Created Date: 5/23/2000 3:46:47 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Comprehensive School Health: (CSH)


1
Comprehensive School Health (CSH)
  • An Integrated Approach to Promoting Wellness in a
    Healthy School Setting

2
CSH Background History
3
Horses are easier to ride in the direction they
are going.
4
Presentation Goals
  • Visioning exercise
  • Introduction of the Comprehensive School Health
    Concept
  • Group Work Opportunities Barriers
  • Where do we go from here?

5
Visioning What Constitutes a Healthy School?
  • Lets imagine that your school has made a
    conscious decision to become the healthiest
    school possible. As the School Nurse, what might
    you notice.
  • as you walk through the school?
  • as you meet with the principal teachers?
  • as you meet the students?
  • as you meet the parents?

6
  • Goals of comprehensive approaches
  • to promote health and wellness
  • to prevent specific diseases, disorders, and
    injury
  • to intervene to assist children and youth who are
    in need or at risk
  • to help support those who are already
    experiencing poor health

7
Definition from CASH and CNA
  • A comprehensive school health approach includes
    a broad spectrum of activities and services that
    take place in schools and surrounding communities
    and enable children and youth to enhance their
    health, develop to their fullest potential, and
    establish productive and satisfying relationships
    in their present and future lives.

8
Basically...
  • promoting skills, values, and behaviours for
    healthy living.

9
Why has this approach gained so much popularity
over the years?
  • because young people are more at risk
  • because better health means better learning
  • because its cost-effective
  • because it works! --gt --gt --gt --gt --gt

10
  • Comprehensive approaches that link the
    development of skills and knowledge with
    different forms of social support, services, or
    healthier physical environments are most
    effective.

11
Why target schools for health promotion
activities?
  • other than family, main source of influence on
    children
  • workplace of 20 of our population (students and
    educators)
  • another 30 of the population (parents) are
    directly involved with schools through their
    children

12
Organizations that have officially endorsed the
concept of CSH
13
Canada CSH
  • In 1990..only 3 of educators and health leaders
    were familiar with the term

14
  • By 1998..
  • 10/12 education ministries
  • 5/12 health ministries
  • 40 of school boards
  • and 53 of Public Health Units ..e
    xplicitly support CSH

15
Components of a CSH Program
  • Formal and informal health instruction in schools
  • Support services for students and families
  • Social support from parents, peers, staff, local
    community, media, and policymakers
  • Healthy physical environments

16
Components
17
Criteria for Instruction
  • Active health promotion
  • Comprehensive curriculum in the areas of health,
    physical education, personal development, and
    family studies
  • High-quality teaching/materials
  • Appropriate teaching methods using varied
    learning strategies
  • Effective teacher inservice training

18
Examples of Instruction Strategies
  • Integration of health into other subject areas
  • Recognition of formal informal learning
    opportunities with peers and parents
  • Lifestyle-focused physical education focusing on
    awareness, decision-making, skill-building,
    social action, attitudinal behavioural change

19
Criteria for Support Services
  • Access to appropriate health social services
    and information for children and families
  • Inter-agency, inter-ministry, and
    inter-disciplinary cooperation, coordination of
    services, comprehensive policies
  • Inter-agency committee
  • Inservice training for nurses and professionals

20
Examples of Support Services
  • student services
  • school guidance counselling services
  • child protection
  • services for special needs students
  • an integrated web of services offering
    appraisals, early identification, referrals,
    treatment and follow-up

21
Criteria for Social Support
  • positive school climate
  • involvement of all stakeholders
  • formal needs assessment planning
  • active student participation
  • community involvement in the school
  • community coordination
  • active parental/family involvement

22
Examples of Social Support
  • role modelling by school staff
  • adult mentorship
  • peer support programs/ leadership
  • staff wellness programs
  • comprehensive wellness programs
  • appropriate school discipline policies
  • community development
  • media cooperation
  • healthy public policy from school boards, boards
    of health and social service agencies

23
Criteria for Building a Healthy Physical
Environment
  • Comply with legislation
  • Implement health-related policies
  • Tell the school
  • Tell the community

24
Examples of Environmental Support
  • safety and accident prevention measures in the
    school and playgrounds
  • environmental health standards for sanitation,
    clean water, hygiene, lighting, noise
  • healthy food services and/or meal programs
  • smoke-free school policies
  • alcohol and drug-free policies
  • harassment, discrimination, and bullying policies

25
Example of the concept in action
26
CASHs recommended six step process for
implementation
  • Review idea. Talk with colleagues.
  • List activities/programs already happening in
    your community.
  • Connect these activities/programs maintain
    regular communications.

27
Six steps, cont
  • Brainstorm possible joint activities/ projects.
  • Priorize. Choose one or two activities. Develop
    an action plan.
  • Assess. Evaluate. Celebrate successes. Choose
    your next steps.

28
Group Work
  • What are the opportunities and barriers to
    implementing a CSH Model in our schools?

29
Taking Action One Step at a Time
  • Start simply
  • Be imaginative
  • Work to gradually implement elements over a
    period of time
  • Have fun!

30
The turtle wins the race.
31
Next Steps
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