Educational Programs for the Promotion of Health at School: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Concept of Health
1.2. Health Promotion and Health Promoting Schools
1.3. Programs That Promote Health
- What programs do health-promoting schools develop and promote?
- Are educational programs effective in promoting healthy habits in students?
- What are the difficulties and limitations for the development of programs that promote health in educational centers?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Review
2.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
2.3. Procedure
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Identification of Health Promotion Programs
3.4. Effectiveness and Main Difficulties in the Development of Programs That Promote Health
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- Education and health promotion programs in schools must link families with the educational center.
- Improving the training of teachers in health matters is a requirement.
- Health promotion is a social commitment that requires the participation of all its members.
- Health education is not an exclusive commitment of schools, it must involve families and health professionals.
- Health education must be a fundamental objective in the annual programming of schools.
- Programs have to be well structured to work.
- Peer training is beneficial and makes programs work.
- The teacher must be a fundamental support point in the success of health promotion, they must lead the change by encouraging and motivating students towards the adoption of healthy habits.
- An improvement in the qualification and training of teachers in the field of health is required.
- Health promotion programs must be, above all, programs for the training of the entire educational community.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion | Exclusion |
---|---|
| Articles older than 10 years Articles in languages other than English Articles not focused on health programs Articles that do not base their results on the evaluation of the effectiveness of the programs Articles of reflection |
Cite | Purpose | Country | Year | Design | Sample | Assessment Instrument | Type of Program | Primary Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[15] | Identify the factors that affect the acceptability of health promotion programs in the everyday school environment | Ireland | 2016 | Qualitative | 31 Professors | Semi-structured interviews | Not preventive | Educational centers play a fundamental role in promoting children’s health. But, some aspects of health promotion programs are incompatible with daily school work. |
[23] | Evaluate the effectiveness of an integrated health promotion program in the Lower Austrian primary schools based on the Health Promoting Schools framework (HPS) to increase the number of emotional and social experiences, physical activity and wellbeing at school | Austria | 2016 | Quantitative | 432 students participating |
| Not preventive | The intervention does not have a relevant effect on the expected results at the individual level. |
[24] | Evaluate the implementation of an Fe supplementation program in secondary schools of the West Azerbaijan province in northwestern Iran; and evaluate the usefulness of the Crosswise Model (CM) to evaluate the health implementation program | Iran | 2019 | Mixed (quantitative and qualitative) | 2180 students (1740 questionnaires and 440 interviews) |
| Not preventive | The poor quality of program implementation and incomplete and irregular intake of Fe supplements by of high school students made the program ineffective in reducing both Fe deficiency and anemia due to Fe deficiency in this group |
[25] | Evaluate the fidelity and acceptability of the study, putting it into practice in a different country and the context for which it was created | Scotland | 2019 | Mixed (quantitative and qualitative) | 2130 students, 41 center staff, 31 trainers and 17 program developers) |
| Preventive | It is feasible and acceptable to offer the ASSIST smoking prevention program with high-level fidelity beyond the context in which it was developed originally |
[26] | Evaluate the effectiveness of the environment-based health promotion program “Join the Healthy Boat” on sedentary time in elementary school children | Germany | 2020 | Quantitative | 231 students (133 from the experimental group and the rest from the control group) |
| Not preventive | The program (“Join the Healthy Boat”) failed to reduce sedentary time within 12 months; this was especially evident on weekends |
[27] | Identify whether comments obtained from a representative group of ATLAS participants on their perceptions of the program and its effects reflected the self-determination theory (SDT) basis in the what the program was based on | Australia | 2018 | Qualitative | 42 students |
| Not preventive | There were no significant intervention effects on activity, although changes were seen in time behind screens, muscular endurance, and training skills |
[28] | Evaluate a unique program that incorporates resilience, coping, problem-solving and confidence building | United States of America | 2019 | Mixed (qualitative and quantitative) | 88 students (63 from Primary Education and the rest from Secondary) |
| Preventive | The general findings suggest that this theoretically framed hope-based program was able to significantly improve levels of anxiety and emotional regulation in elementary school students and improve adaptive coping strategies and resilience in post-primary students |
Cite. | Healthy Nutrition | Physical Activity | Emotional Wellbeing | Consumption | Ambient |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[15] | Yes | Yes | Yes | - | - |
[23] | - | Yes | - | - | Yes |
[24] | Yes | - | - | - | - |
[25] | - | - | - | Yes | - |
[26] | Yes | Yes | - | Yes | - |
[27] | Yes | Yes | - | Yes | - |
[28] | - | - | Yes | - | - |
Cite | Effectiveness | Main Difficulties |
---|---|---|
[15] | No | Excess work, little qualification of the teaching staff, and little family participation |
[23] | No | Inappropriate intervention |
[24] | No | Inadequate planning and implementation of the program |
[25] | Yes | - |
[26] | No | Lack of family participation |
[27] | Yes | - |
[28] | Yes | - |
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Pérez-Jorge, D.; González-Luis, M.A.; Rodríguez-Jiménez, M.d.C.; Ariño-Mateo, E. Educational Programs for the Promotion of Health at School: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 10818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010818
Pérez-Jorge D, González-Luis MA, Rodríguez-Jiménez MdC, Ariño-Mateo E. Educational Programs for the Promotion of Health at School: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(20):10818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010818
Chicago/Turabian StylePérez-Jorge, David, María Alejandra González-Luis, María del Carmen Rodríguez-Jiménez, and Eva Ariño-Mateo. 2021. "Educational Programs for the Promotion of Health at School: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 20: 10818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010818
APA StylePérez-Jorge, D., González-Luis, M. A., Rodríguez-Jiménez, M. d. C., & Ariño-Mateo, E. (2021). Educational Programs for the Promotion of Health at School: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(20), 10818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010818