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State Agencies
Idaho

FACTS & FIGURES
Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System
Comprehensive Results

Comparisons Between State or District and National Results [pdf 118K]

School Health Profiles
Chronic Disease [pdf 104K]
Selected Topics  [pdf 92K]

School Health Policies and Programs Study
School Health Program Report Card

Health Topic Fact Sheets
Childhood Overweight
[pdf 195K]
HIV Epidemic [pdf 269K]
Tobacco Use [pdf 116K]
Violence Prevention [pdf 116K]
 

PREVIOUS PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
Idaho, 2003–2008
 
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Idaho State Department of Education*

Shannon Page
CSHP Director

Rhonda DeMers
PANT Coordinator

Pat Stewart
HIV/Health Coordinator
 

Idaho Department of Health and Welfare*

Tera Pinon
CSHP Director
 


 
Healthy KidsIdaho receives funding from CDC’s Division of Adolescent and School Health to promote coordinated school health, provide HIV prevention education, and conduct the Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS). Idaho’s Coordinated School Health Program (CSHP) is a collaborative effort between the state’s Department of Education and Department of Health and Welfare. Idaho's HIV/AIDS Education Program works with schools, school district staff, state and local health departments, professional organizations, and nonprofit organizations to provide teachers and school staff with the knowledge and skills needed to ensure effective implementation of HIV prevention education.

Idaho's Program In Action

Promoting Coordinated School Health with an Emphasis on Physical Activity, Nutrition, and Tobacco Use Prevention (PANT)

  • Strengthening collaborative partnerships at the state level to provide support to schools, communities, and local organizations in developing and implementing a coordinated school health program.
     
  • Providing technical assistance to school districts to further develop, implement, and evaluate their school wellness polices.
     
  • Convening a statewide summit to identify available student health data and gaps in data collection.
     
  • Creating school improvement plans for physical activity, nutrition, and tobacco use prevention using results from the School Health Index (SHI).
     
  • Providing technical assistance to help districts evaluate their physical education curricula using the Physical Education Curriculum Analysis Tool (PECAT).

Providing HIV Prevention Education

  • Maintaining and updating a statewide professional development cadre to conduct regional workshops for teachers and staff on HIV prevention strategies.
     
  • Conducting regional workshops on HIV/AIDS prevention to ensure that new teachers and staff receive accurate information.
     
  • Collaborating with community-based agencies to provide HIV prevention education to high-risk youth, including out-of-school youth.

Conducting the Youth Risk Behavior Survey

  • Collaborating with the Governor's Commission, members of the school board from the state’s largest school district, and the HIV/AIDS Materials Review Panel to select and administer the YRBS survey questions.
     
  • Administering the YRBS in high schools throughout Idaho to obtain data representative of students in grades 9-12.
     
  • Developing a marketing plan to distribute the YRBS results to schools, health departments, legislators, and other youth-serving agencies.


For information on Idaho's previous program activities, see Idaho, 2003–2008.


For data from other states, territories, or localities, see

The above pages also provide accessible formats for the PDF files on this page. Accessible formats are provided for those using assistive technology. Learn more about viewing and printing PDF documents with Acrobat Reader.

For more information on CDC/DASH funded programs, see

* Links to non-Federal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. Links do not constitute an endorsement of any organization by CDC or the Federal Government, and none should be inferred. The CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at this link.






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Page last reviewed: March 4, 2008
Page last modified: September 24, 2008
Content source: National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Division of Adolescent and School Health

Division of Adolescent and School Health
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Department of Health and Human Services