School-Based Clinics: Their Role in Helping Students Meet the 1990 Objectives

Service statistics and observations from site visits across the country indicate that school-based clinics (SBCs) may be having an impact on several of the problems targeted in the 1990 health objectives, including unplanned pregnancy and substance abuse. At least 120 junior and senior high schools...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health education & behavior 1988, Vol.15 (1), p.71-80
Hauptverfasser: Dryfoos, Joy G., Klerman, Lorraine V.
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Klerman, Lorraine V.
description Service statistics and observations from site visits across the country indicate that school-based clinics (SBCs) may be having an impact on several of the problems targeted in the 1990 health objectives, including unplanned pregnancy and substance abuse. At least 120 junior and senior high schools in 61 communities are currently operating or developing clinics. Growth is attributed to increasing concern about highrisk youth, especially among educators in their roles of "surrogate parents"; to disillusion with categorical interventions and a movement toward more comprehensive services; and to student, parent, school, and community approval of the new programs. This article describes the comprehensive school-based clinic model, including its history, organizational strategies, school/community partnerships, and services.
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subjects Adolescent
Community-Institutional Relations
Family Planning Services
Female
Health Education
Health Promotion
Humans
Population
Pregnancy
Pregnancy in Adolescence
School Health Services - economics
School Health Services - organization & administration
School Health Services - trends
United States
title School-Based Clinics: Their Role in Helping Students Meet the 1990 Objectives
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