Overview of Evidence Concerning School-Based Interventions for Improving the Health of School-Aged Children and Adolescents

Overview of Evidence Concerning School-Based Interventions for Improving the Health of School-Aged Children and Adolescents

Authors
Suto, M. Miyazaki, C. Yanagawa, Y. Takehara, K. Kato, T. Gai, R. Ota, E. Mori, R.
Year
2021
Journal
Journal of School Health
Volume
05
Pages
05
BACKGROUND: Universal prevention approaches that target the general population can be effective for promoting children's health. This overview aims to summarize evidence presented in existing reviews of school-based interventions. METHODS: We present an overview of evidence sourced from Campbell and Cochrane systematic reviews. These reviews examined randomized controlled trials concerning school-based health-promotion programs for children (mostly aged 4-18 years) in the general population. RESULTS: We identified 56 high-quality reviews. The reviews focused on emotional and behavioral outcomes, infectious diseases, injury reduction, mental health, nutrition intake, oral health, physical and developmental changes, sense-organ diseases, sexual-health outcomes, and substance use/abuse. Positive evidence-such as vision screening plus provision of free spectacles for spectacle wear increase and a combination of social competence and social-influence approaches for preventing illicit drug use-were considered high certainty. CONCLUSIONS: Of the various interventions implemented in school settings that involved people from various occupations, some positive effects were found. In most cases, evidence certainty was negatively affected by a high risk of bias within studies, inconsistencies within the estimates, and insufficient sample sizes. Further primary studies in these areas would be helpful for accumulating evidence to promote stronger cooperation between health and education stakeholders.

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Type of intervention

Preventive- and Promotive Health Interventions

Topic

Mental Health Problems and Disorders

Behavior Problems

Externalizing Behaviors / Challenging Behaviors

Antisocial Behaviors

Development and Life Coping Skills

Social skills

Minority/Marginalization

Bullying

School Refusal

Intervention

The organization of interventions

School/Preschoolbased Interventions

Public Health Interventions

Age group

Preschool Aged Children (3-5 years)

School Aged Children (6-12 years)

Adolescents (13-18 years)

Characteristics

Overviews of Reviews

More information
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