Health and your environment: schools 10/8/2009 9:00 AMHealth and Your Environment: Schools by Tom Weber, Minnesota Public Radio (reprinted from MPR News Q Web site)
(October 7, 2009 --St. Paul, MN) There are many factors that affect our health,
from genetics to our own personal behaviors. Our health is also shaped
by the condition of the world around us - factors such as where we live
and where we go to school.
In public health circles these are called the social determinants of
health. We may not personally have much control over some of these
factors, but they can make a huge difference in our health and even our
lifespan.
Higher rates of childhood obesity and childhood diabetes have put focus
on schools and the role they play in the health of youngsters. Schools
make a lot of decisions for kids - like the lunches they eat and recess
they do or do not have.
But for schools grappling with expectations for higher test scores,
health awareness sometimes falls by the wayside.
Jackson Preparatory Magnet School
There are 550 or so kindergarten through sixth-graders at Jackson Preparatory Magnet School, in St. Paul's Frogtown neighborhood. They're just about all
students of color, and 90 percent of them live in poverty. Given those
demographics, Principal Patrick Bryan says a good 275 of them are on
pace to develop diabetes, if they follow current trends.
A compelling reason, he said, to have personal health just as high up
on the to-do list as reading, writing and arithmetic.
"Do we assume that a child knows how to think mathematically or do
multiplication tables? No, they learn that from us," Bryan said. "We
should assume that they do not have the knowledge in their heads of
what necessarily makes for the healthy relationship between diet and
exercise, rest and physical health."
Bryan finds one stat especially startling. A CDC report a few years ago
said as many as one-in-two children of color born after 2000 will
develop diabetes.
At Jackson, fat is fought with things like carrots and zucchini as the
afternoon snack. Parents are encouraged to not bake cupcakes or send
treats. Junk food is never a reward for doing something, and everyone
even gets a few yoga lessons.
But the big change, made last year, was recess. It's now before lunch,
not after. Bryan said that makes the kids hungrier and they eat more,
meaning they don't leave the fruits and vegetables on the tray.
Recess itself is also different because it has structure. Before they
can play, every student must do 30 jumping jacks, then run or speed
walk two laps around the playground, even in the winter too.
Principal Bryan dons his shorts and sneakers every day to encourage
kids, like fourth-grader Isiah, to keep running. "You can do how many
laps you want until it's time for recess to end," Isiah said. He added
he planned to do three laps that day, which would earn him extra credit
because he was only supposed to do two.
In fact, in arranging to even interview Bryan, he told me to bring
running shoes. It boosts energy, he said, which make afternoons less
sleepy. He can't prove it but he thinks test scores improve, too, which
is why everyone went running last springs on those mornings before
standardized tests. Other problems don't pop up because of all the
anxiety burned off, he said.
"Our disciplinary data has practically gone through the floor, meaning
it has gone from being relatively higher to almost not being there at
all," Bryan said.
But Bryan sees plenty of social determinants at play when these kids
leave school. One idea behind social determinants is that even if you
personally decide to make all the right, healthy decisions, society
sometimes throws up walls to keep you from doing that.
Most Jackson Elementary students live in poverty. Bryan said parents,
for example, often can't afford to go buy all those fresh ingredients
at the store;fast food is cheaper.
"I can't give you hard data and say, yeah - my test scores are higher
because they're running and learning about physical fitness and health
and healthy diet and all that stuff," Bryan said. "But I tell ya',
we're running a pretty good counter operation to fast food and
couch-potato lifestyles that lead to childhood diabetes."
But even Jackson Elementary had to face the ultimate challenge in
making these changes: money.
Funding health education
Ann Hoxie, who supervises health and wellness for the St. Paul School
district, said Jackson and other schools probably would not have been
able to do some of this stuff, except that a few grants helped pay for
many of the changes.
Even within St. Paul, Hoxie said Jackson is an exception. There's so
much pressure for schools to improve test scores that some, Hoxie said,
have cut physical education and recess when scores decline to free up
more time for classroom teaching.
"Some of what we're trying to say is 'you also need to make sure that
some of the other things that make a whole child are there,' such as
good nutrition and physical activity," Hoxie said.
For people studying these factors in society, this has been a key
factor. Susan Egerter, co-director of the Center on Social Disparities
on Health at the University of California, San Franciso, said she
constantly hears from educators who have the desire to think about all
things health -- they just don't have the money, or time.
"The danger there is people have so many things on their plate and, if
budgets are an issue, they don't have the resources to even think about
it," Egerter said. "So what we have to do is find ways, again, that can
be low-cost solutions or no-cost solutions that really get people
thinking about it."
Egerter also says it's important to just go to school. Some of her research suggests
the higher degree you have, the healthier you are. Based on data on
life expectancy, college graduates can expect to live at least 5 years
longer than individuals who have not finished high school.
Back at Jackson Elementary, that aligns with what Principal Patrick
Bryan is thinking. It's not enough, he said, for these kids to get
accepted to college when they're older. They have to graduate.
But Bryan is also thinking short-term, like next spring, when the end
of the school year causes kids' attention to wander. Bryan might just
have them all run twice a day during those last weeks of school
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