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CCHE: School-Based Health Center Program

LEON SMART • Practice Administrator • lds9005@nyp.org MELANIE GOLD, DO, DABMA, DMQ, FAAP, FACOP • Medical Director • mag2295@columbia.edu

Mission and Goals

The School-Based Health Center (SBHC) Program is a network of primary care practice sites located within seven New York City Department of Education school campuses, housing 23 middle schools and high schools SBHCs provide primary health care, immunizations, chronic illness management, sexual and reproductive health services, and care for acute illness and injury to all students on campus — facilitating access to care and preventing lost academic time In addition, mental health care is fully integrated in the provision of care and provided onsite by psychologists, clinical social workers, and a psychiatrist Dental services are available at select sites Health educators provide individual counseling, conduct classroom education sessions – including evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention curricula – and train and lead peer educators who conduct educational sessions on a range of youth health promotion topics

Number of People Reached

6,000 Total number of patients annually 2,000 Students receiving evidencebased classroom education

Key Accomplishments

• Community Schools Mental Health

Intervention. Via an evidencebased framework, a broad range of school-based mental health support services promote the emotional well-being and healthy functioning of all students on the

George Washington Educational

High School Campus The three tiers encompass “universal” mental health services, which provide school-wide resources to impart knowledge and promote a nurturing environment for all students; “selective” services, which support a subset of students at risk of developing mental health or substance use conditions; and “targeted” mental health services, which support students who have diagnosable mental health conditions

• NYPeers peer education and youth development. Annual cohorts of youth leaders are identified to receive evidence-based training and conduct peer education on a host of health promotion topics In addition, youth leaders spend a summer interning at the Hospital and gain professional skills and exposure to health career paths

• Integrative health in

SBHCs.Mindfulness, self-hypnosis, acupuncture, acupressure, aromatherapy, and yoga are integrative health modalities offered at

SBHCs

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