Results 321 to 330 of about 3,111,927 (377)

Developing a whole systems action plan promoting Dutch adolescents' sleep health. [PDF]

open access: yesInt J Behav Nutr Phys Act
Heemskerk DM   +4 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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SCHOOL HEALTH SERVICES*

Journal of School Health, 1949
HEALTH services for the child of school age have tended to center at the school, first because children are concentrated there and thus can be easily reached, and second because the school situation offers an excellent opportunity for health education.
Katherine Bain   +2 more
openaire   +5 more sources

School Health Services

Journal of School Health, 1987
ABSTRACT: Since compulsory public education began in the United States, a component of that system which now is titled, School Health Services, has existed. Even with this history, the concept remains somewhat nebulous, even in the minds of its supporters, because of a paucity of verifiable, reproducible research in the area. Until research catches up
Joseph R. Zanga, Dorothy S. Oda
openaire   +3 more sources

The school health service

Current Paediatrics, 2001
Abstract The school health service came into being almost 100 years ago. It has responsibility for delivering a core service to all children of school age, although some with special needs will require additional input. It is important that the service offered is tailored to the needs of the population, both as a group and as individuals.
David Elliman, D. Fitton
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School-based health services

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 1996
Children, particularly adolescents, have unique health care needs and experience frequent barriers to receiving needed medical care. The expansion of school-based health services since the early 1970s is one recent development in the area of health services delivery that is a specific response to facilitate meeting the medical needs of youth.
Sheryl Ryan   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Health services in schools

1981
Schools for children exist in most countries, although they differ in many aspects, including curriculum content, length of study and physical setting. Attending school is the major activity in the life of most children in affluent countries, and this is likely to become so for children in less affluent countries, as the importance of education and the
Kenneth D. Rogers, Foster H. Young
openaire   +2 more sources

A school health service for children?

Children & Society, 1998
This paper considers the merits of the school health service in England and Wales, viewed as a service for children of primary school age. The paper reports on data from a recent Economic and Social Research Council‐funded study: Children's Health in Primary Schools.
Berry Mayall, Pamela Storey
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School Health Service

1978
School age is probably the most important phase of childhood. It is the period during which the child enters society’s training system from which he would emerge as a contributing member of the community according to his capabilities. The major problems of this phase do not lie in the field of disease and mortality but in growth and development to ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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