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Vinu Ilakkuvan; Anne De Biasi – Journal of School Health, 2024
Background: Medicaid is a key policy lever for expanding access to mental health services and supports for children in schools, especially low-income and minority children. This study examines how Medicaid finances mental health promotion and prevention (tier 1), screening and selected interventions (tier 2), and treatment (tier 3) in schools,…
Descriptors: Health Insurance, Public Policy, Mental Health, Health Services
Ezra Golberstein; Irina Zainullina; Aaron Sojourner; Mark A. Sander – W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2023
This brief studies an intervention that placed mental health clinicians in Minnesota schools. This analysis focuses on the implementation of the school-based mental health (SBMH) program in K-12 public schools in Hennepin County, Minnesota, which includes the city of Minneapolis and its suburbs. The analysis uses administrative data and survey…
Descriptors: Mental Health, School Health Services, Public Schools, Access to Health Care
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Evelyn Vázquez; Tanya Nieri; Frances Fernandes; Danielle Cravalho; Fiona Ryan-Shirey; Lisa Molina; Sarah Marie Pemberton; Ann M. Cheney – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: To discuss the engagement of patients and stakeholders (i.e., faculty, staff, healthcare providers, and university administrators) in capacity building activities to prepare for future patient-centered research on collegiate recovery. Participants: 502 attended capacity building activities and provided input on priorities for future…
Descriptors: Diversity, Minority Groups, Barriers, Drug Addiction
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Emmett, Susan D. – Volta Review, 2022
Of the 1.6 billion people with hearing loss worldwide, over 1.2 billion live in underserved communities with the least access to hearing care. This includes preventable hearing loss in an estimated 42 million children who, without early identification and treatment, are at increased risk of significant detrimental effects that can last a lifetime.…
Descriptors: Hearing Impairments, Health Services, Access to Health Care, Health Needs
Yonkaitis, Catherine F.; Dark, Amy; Compton, Linda; Haynie, Kathey – National Association of School Nurses, 2022
It is the position of the National Association of School Nurses (NASN) that all students should have access to school nursing care by a registered, professional school nurse (hereinafter referred to as school nurse) all day, every day. For students who face barriers to accessing healthcare, especially those living in predominantly low-income,…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, School Health Services, School Nurses, Barriers
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Fortney, Stoni; Tassé, Marc J. – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2021
Previous research suggests that residence in non-metropolitan areas is associated with lower access to preventive care and poorer health. However, this research has been largely restricted to the general population, despite data demonstrating disparities in health status and access to healthcare services for people with intellectual and…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Rural Population, Access to Health Care, Prevention
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Jon L. Brunner; Adam G. McCabe; David L. Wallace – Journal of College Student Mental Health, 2024
The decline in college student mental health has been articulated by counseling center directors and administrators in higher education and has been thoroughly documented by research. Counseling centers have responded with diverse functions and services to holistically address the emotional and behavioral health needs of students. Beyond clinical…
Descriptors: College Students, Mental Health, Health Services, Counseling Services
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Liane C. Pereira; Deborah A. Ith – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Poor mental health in childhood and adolescence has a significant impact on both physical and mental health throughout life. However, growing evidence suggests that current levels of child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) care are insufficient to meet the needs of many children and adolescents in the United States as evidenced by increasing…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Access to Education, Mental Health Programs, Developmental Stages
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Heather D. Tevendale; Lucas Godoy Garraza; Megan A. M. Brooks; Emilia H. Koumans; L. Duane House; Hope M. Sommerfeldt; Anna Brittain; Trisha Mueller; Taleria R. Fuller; Lisa Romero; Amy Fasula; Lee Warner – Prevention Science, 2024
The impact of community-wide teen pregnancy prevention initiatives (CWIs) on local U.S. birth rates among adolescents aged 15 to 19 years was examined using synthetic control methodology within a quasi-experimental design. CWIs were implemented in 10 U.S. communities from 2010 to 2015. Each initiative implemented evidence-based teen pregnancy…
Descriptors: Prevention, Adolescents, Pregnancy, Community Health Services
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Tara Powell; Greta Wetzel; Jodi Berger Cardoso – Children & Schools, 2024
The Journey of Hope (JoH) is an evidence-based behavioral health prevention intervention model designed for disaster-affected children and youth. While the in-person JoH model has been extensively delivered and studied, the virtual implementation of this intervention, specifically tailored for the unique needs of children and youth during the…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, COVID-19, Pandemics, Natural Disasters
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Dawnyéa D. Jackson; Dana E. Wagner; Penny Norman; Gray Abarca; Kim Zambole – Health Education & Behavior, 2025
Similar to national trends, in Illinois, fatal opioid overdoses have risen. Black men (35+) outrank all other racial subgroups for the highest rate of fatal opioid overdoses in the state. To address this, Prevention First and the Illinois Department of Human Services developed a public health education campaign to support increasing enrollment in…
Descriptors: Adults, Males, Blacks, Drug Addiction
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Kodish, Tamar; Kim, Joanna J.; Le, Kenny; Yu, Stephanie H.; Bear, Laurel; Lau, Anna S. – School Mental Health, 2020
Schools across the US have implemented suicide prevention procedures to detect risk among students and facilitate linkage to mental health services. Yet, many students at risk for suicide do not access mental health treatment, and significant racial/ethnic disparities in service utilization persist. Quality improvement of suicide prevention…
Descriptors: Suicide, Prevention, At Risk Students, Health Services
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Cohen, Daniel R.; Lindsey, Michael A.; Lochman, John E. – Psychology in the Schools, 2022
Suicide in Black youth is a major public health crisis. Given that racism is a core aspect of the lived experience of Black students in educational settings, efforts to reduce racial disparities in suicide risk must identify and address sources of racism in school contexts and facilitate culturally relevant coping strategies. This article…
Descriptors: Suicide, African American Students, Racism, Risk Management
Healthy Schools Campaign, 2024
Over the past 20 years, substance use (SU) among adolescents has decreased to the lowest levels in decades. While there has been a decline, these public health successes have not been shared equally. Significant racial and ethnic disparities exist, with Black and Latinx adolescents, as well as adolescents from lower socioeconomic backgrounds,…
Descriptors: Prevention, Early Intervention, Substance Abuse, Outcomes of Treatment
Hart, Shelley R. – Communique, 2021
This article serves as the first in a series addressing comprehensive suicide prevention programming in the school context. Suicide is currently the second leading cause of death for 10- to 24-year-olds in the United States. As schools are a place where the majority of youth spend a significant amount of time, it follows that they are a natural…
Descriptors: Suicide, Prevention, School Health Services, Mental Health
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