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Schools’ Roles in Public Health Crises

This entry is part 39 of 65 in the series Focus on Accreditation and Innovation

The purpose of the Center for School Health Innovation and Quality is to drive innovation in school health research and leadership so students in every community gain the tools needed to thrive in school and live healthy lives.

Think of the public health issues our country currently faces—health misinformation, burnout of health workers, the mental health of youth, loneliness, health inequities, e-cigarettes, opioids, and other substance abuse. Social factors such as food insecurity, lack of housing, and violence continue to plague society. All of these issues are being experienced by or directly impact youth. Since most youth attend schools for much of their waking day, schools are an important community public health partner. In fact, schools have been inundated with various programs and organizations that want to address one of the issues facing youth!

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the delivery of school health had not significantly changed for over 50 years, despite advances in medical care, changes in population health, and advances in technology. The crisis of the day would be addressed but without a look at the infrastructure for a more sustainable approach. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and ASCD developed the Whole School, Whole Child, Whole Community model, which coordinates ten components of school health: health education, physical education & activity, nutrition environment & services, health services, counseling, psychological & social services, social & emotional climate, physical environment, employee wellness, family engagement, and community involvement. Ideally, the components coordinate effort to meet the needs of the school. However, the funding streams of these components often differ, and efforts have been siloed. During the pandemic, society was forced to deliver care differently. As schools struggle to meet all the factors that impact youth’s ability to learn and thrive, we have an amazing opportunity to be innovative and do things differently.

The Center for School Health Innovation and Quality (C4SHIQ), incubated at the Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB), was created by a group of school health researchers because no single organization is dedicated to the health of the whole school-age child population or the specialty of school health (particularly school nursing) research. The purpose of the Center is to drive innovation in school health research and leadership so students in every community gain the tools needed to thrive in school and live healthy lives. The C4SHIQ’s three pillars of work include:

The focus of the C4SHIQ’s work is to reinvent school health and school nursing practice to better serve all students, with a special focus on students from underserved groups. It is what our youth need and deserve.

The C4SHIQ is housed in the Public Health National Center for Innovations (PHNCI), which is part of the Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB). Learn more on the Center for School Health Innovation and Quality webpage or email C4SHIQ@phaboard.org.


Erin Maughan, PhD, MS, RN, PHNA-BC, FNASN, FAAN, Executive Director, has over 22 years of experience as a frontline school nurse, the state school and adolescent school nurse consultant for the Utah Department of Health, and as a school nurse researcher. As the former Director of Research at the National Association of School Nurses, she co-led the development of a national uniform data set for school nurses, identification of school nurse indicators, and the creation of NASN’s Framework for 21st Century School Nursing Practice™. She is certified as an advanced public health nurse and serves as the executive director for the Center of School Health Innovation & Quality and is an associate professor at George Mason University. She currently sits on the World Health Organization’s UNICEF & UNESCO joint Technical Advisory Group of Experts on Educational Institutions and COVID-19 and has provided consultation related to school health to the WHO’s office in Sierra Leone. Throughout her career, Dr. Maughan has studied and provided consultation on issues related to school health infrastructure and policy. She has expertise in online survey development and implementation, as well as conducting focus groups and key informant interviews. She has received honors for her vast experience, publications, and presentations at the local, national, and international level. Dr. Maughan is a Fellow of the Johnson and Johnson School Health Program, the National Academy of School Nursing, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and American Academy of Nursing. 

Focus on Accreditation and Innovation

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