The Health Promoting Schools Framework: Known Unknowns and an Agenda for Future Research

The World Health Organization’s Health Promoting Schools (HPS) framework is a whole-school approach to promoting health that recognizes the intrinsic relationship between health and education. Our recent Cochrane systematic review found HPS interventions produced improvements in a number of student...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health education & behavior 2017-06, Vol.44 (3), p.463-475
Hauptverfasser: Langford, Rebecca, Bonell, Christopher, Komro, Kelli, Murphy, Simon, Magnus, Daniel, Waters, Elizabeth, Gibbs, Lisa, Campbell, Rona
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container_end_page 475
container_issue 3
container_start_page 463
container_title Health education & behavior
container_volume 44
creator Langford, Rebecca
Bonell, Christopher
Komro, Kelli
Murphy, Simon
Magnus, Daniel
Waters, Elizabeth
Gibbs, Lisa
Campbell, Rona
description The World Health Organization’s Health Promoting Schools (HPS) framework is a whole-school approach to promoting health that recognizes the intrinsic relationship between health and education. Our recent Cochrane systematic review found HPS interventions produced improvements in a number of student health outcomes. Here we reflect on what this review was not able to tell us: in other words, what evidence is missing with regard to the HPS approach. Few HPS interventions engage with schools’ “core business” by examining impacts on educational outcomes. Current evidence is dominated by obesity interventions, with most studies conducted with children rather than adolescents. Evidence is lacking for outcomes such as mental or sexual health, substance use, and violence. Activities to engage families and communities are currently weak and unlikely to prompt behavioral change. The HPS approach is largely absent in low-income settings, despite its potential in meeting children’s basic health needs. Intervention theories are insufficiently complex, often ignoring upstream determinants of health. Few studies provide evidence on intervention sustainability or cost-effectiveness, nor in-depth contextual or process data. We set out an agenda for future school health promotion research, considering implications for key stakeholders, namely, national governments, research funders, academics, and schools.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1090198116673800
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subjects Academic staff
Adolescent Health
Adolescents
Age Differences
Aggression
Behavior Change
Biomedical Research
Business
Central government
Child Health
Childhood obesity
Children
Correlation
Cost analysis
Cost Effectiveness
Education
Educational Attainment
Educational Objectives
Evidence
Forecasting
Guidelines
Health Behavior
Health Education
Health Needs
Health Promotion
Health status
Humans
International Organizations
Intervention
Low Income
Low income groups
Mental Health
Obesity
Obesity - prevention & control
Original Article
Outcomes of Education
Physical Health
School Health Services
Schools
Sexual health
Sexuality
Socioeconomic Factors
Students
Substance Abuse
Substance use
Sustainability
Systematic review
Teenagers
Upstream
Violence
title The Health Promoting Schools Framework: Known Unknowns and an Agenda for Future Research
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