Coordinated School Health

This page has been automatically translated from English. MSDH has not reviewed this translation and is not responsible for any inaccuracies.

The MSDH School Health Program works to make all Mississippi children healthy, ready to learn, and prepared to make lifelong healthy choices through the Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child approach.

Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child

Students need good health to learn their best. And schools are the best place for youth to learn about healthy living. This interrelationship means that good health and development are more than just a subject in school or a portion of the day — they take part in every aspect of learning, teaching and living. The Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child approach brings all these elements together:

  • Health Education: for teaching children about the wide range of factors that influence their health, and how to make lifelong healthy choices.
  • Physical Education: for building strong and capable adults who understand the importance of continued physical activity throughout life.
  • Health Services: for providing a clean and safe school, emergency care for students, illness prevention, and education on primary health care throughout life.
  • Nutrition Services: for ensuring healthy meals for all students and all needs, and education on nutrition at home and in the community, from farm to market.
  • Counseling, Psychological, and Social Services: for maintaining mental, emotional and social health.
  • Healthy and Safe Physical Environment: to create comfortable surroundings that support learning and good health.
  • Healthy and Safe Social Environment: for the emotional well-being of every student.
  • Health Promotion for Staff: for fostering positive attitudes toward health in teachers and school workers so that they become role models for students.
  • Community Involvement: so that schools can accomplish more in education and health, and communities can learn more about leading a healthy life.
  • Family Engagement: because learning does not end at school, and because the most important influences on a student can be parents.

Partners

MSDH works in cooperation with the Mississippi Department of Education's Office of Healthy Schools and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Healthy Youth Division to meet the goals of coordinated school health.

Resources for School Health

Obesity

Physical Activity

In many communities, schools offer a variety of recreational facilities — from playgrounds to gymnasiums — where safe places to play and exercise might not otherwise exist. Joint use agreements create a partnership between schools and residents in a community to share spaces such as playgrounds, athletic fields, pools, and gymnasiums outside of school hours. They can also be used to make community facilities available to schools.

Joint use lets costs and responsibilities be shared, while increasing the opportunities for physical activity for everyone involved.

Physical Activity Resources

Chronic Conditions

Other Resources

School Health

Organizations

Contact

Community & School Health Program
Mississippi State Department of Health
P.O. Box 1700
Jackson, MS 39215-1700

Phone: 601‑206‑1010

CDC and SHAPE America Recess in Schools Web Badge Prevent Teen Pregnancy www.cdc.gov/TeenPregnancy  Promote healthy eating and physical activity in schools. New Guidelines Available! https://www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/npao/strategies.htm
Last reviewed on Sep 6, 2023 request edits

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Mississippi State Department of Health 570 East Woodrow Wilson Dr Jackson, MS 39216 866‑HLTHY4U Contact and information

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