Coordinated School Health
Van Buren County
Monica Howard
Jill Bouldin
CSH Program Coordinator
Program Assistant
931-946-7371 931-946-7371
Mhoward1@k12tn.net
What is CSHP?
A coordinated school health
program (CSHP) model consists of eight interactive components. Schools by
themselves cannot—and should not be expected to—solve the nation’s most serious
health and social problems. Families, health care workers, the media, religious
organizations, community organizations that serve youth, and young people
themselves also must be systematically involved. However, schools could provide
a critical facility in which many agencies might work together to maintain the
well-being of young people.

- Health Education: A
planned, sequential, K-12 curriculum that addresses the physical, mental,
emotional and social dimensions of health. The curriculum is designed to
motivate and assist students to maintain and improve their health, prevent
disease, and reduce health-related risk behaviors. It allows students to
develop and demonstrate increasingly sophisticated health-related knowledge,
attitudes, skills, and practices. The comprehensive health education
curriculum includes a variety of topics such as personal health, family
health, community health, consumer health, environmental health, sexuality
education, mental and emotional health, injury prevention and safety,
nutrition, prevention and control of disease, and substance use and abuse.
Qualified, trained teachers provide health education.
- Physical Education: A
planned, sequential K-12 curriculum that provides cognitive content and
learning experiences in a variety of activity areas such as basic movement
skills; physical fitness; rhythms and dance; games; team, dual, and
individual sports; tumbling and gymnastics; and aquatics. Quality physical
education should promote, through a variety of planned physical activities,
each student's optimum physical, mental, emotional, and social development,
and should promote activities and sports that all students enjoy and can
pursue throughout their lives. Qualified, trained teachers teach physical
activity.
- Health Services: Services
provided for students to appraise, protect, and promote health. These
services are designed to ensure access or referral to primary health care
services or both, foster appropriate use of primary health care services,
prevent and control communicable disease and other health problems, provide
emergency care for illness or injury, promote and provide optimum sanitary
conditions for a safe school facility and school environment, and provide
educational and counseling opportunities for promoting and maintaining
individual, family, and community health. Qualified professionals such as
physicians, nurses, dentists, health educators, and other allied health
personnel provide these services.
- Nutrition Services: Access
to a variety of nutritious and appealing meals that accommodate the health
and nutrition needs of all students. School nutrition programs reflect the
U.S. Dietary Guidelines for Americans and other criteria to achieve
nutrition integrity. The school nutrition services offer students a learning
laboratory for classroom nutrition and health education, and serve as a
resource for linkages with nutrition-related community services. Qualified
child nutrition professionals provide these services.
- Counseling and Psychological
Services: Services provided to improve students' mental, emotional,
and social health. These services include individual and group assessments,
interventions, and referrals. Organizational assessment and consultation
skills of counselors and psychologists contribute not only to the health of
students but also to the health of the school environment. Professionals
such as certified school counselors, psychologists, and social workers
provide these services.
- Healthy School Environment:
The physical and aesthetic surroundings and the psychosocial climate and
culture of the school. Factors that influence the physical environment
include the school building and the area surrounding it, any biological or
chemical agents that are detrimental to health, and physical conditions such
as temperature, noise, and lighting. The psychological environment includes
the physical, emotional, and social conditions that affect the well-being of
students and staff.
- Health Promotion for Staff:
Opportunities for school staff to improve their health status through
activities such as health assessments, health education and health-related
fitness activities. These opportunities encourage school staff to pursue a
healthy lifestyle that contributes to their improved health status, improved
morale, and a greater personal commitment to the school's overall
coordinated health program. This personal commitment often transfers into
greater commitment to the health of students and creates positive role
modeling. Health promotion activities have improved productivity, decreased
absenteeism, and reduced health insurance costs.
- Family/Community Involvement:
An integrated school, parent, and community approach for enhancing the
health and well-being of students. School health advisory councils,
coalitions, and broadly based constituencies for school health can build
support for school health program efforts. Schools actively solicit parent
involvement and engage community resources and services to respond more
effectively to the health-related needs of students.
Content source: National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Division of
Adolescent and School Health