School and Childcare Providers
Asthma is a leading chronic illness among children and youth in the United States and a leading cause of school absenteeism. Teachers, coaches, day care providers, and educators can help children manage their asthma.
This page provides Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), government, and nongovernment resources for school personnel planning or maintaining an asthma management program.
CDC’s Healthy Youth! Asthma Web Site
This site describes CDC’s efforts to increase the number of asthma-friendly schools nationwide. It contains information about CDC programs and resources that deal with asthma among youths and attempt to assess school health policies and programs at the state, district, school, and classroom levels. You’ll find the following important resources:
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Initiating Change: Creating an Asthma-Friendly School
This toolkit will help you convince people in your school and community about the importance of promoting asthma-friendly schools. -
Managing Asthma in Schools—What Have We Learned?
This publication, developed by CDC and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, provides updated information on developing, implementing, and evaluating school-based asthma programs. -
Resources for Addressing Asthma in Schools [PDF, 742KB]
This PDF file provides a comprehensive list of government (including CDC), and nongovernment resources for addressing asthma in schools. -
School Health Index: A Self-Assessment and Planning Guide
This site provides a tool to help schools understand their strengths and weaknesses and to develop an action plan for improving their health policies and programs related to asthma and other health topics. -
Strategies for Addressing Asthma Within a Coordinated School Health Program
This site provides a concise list of strategies with accompanying actions schools can take to help students manage asthma through a coordinated approach.
American Association of School Administrators
This association supports strong school system leadership to improve the lives of children.
American Lung Association
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Asthma-Friendly Schools Initiative Toolkit
This toolkit presents a framework and provides the tools for community organizations and schools to ensure that children with asthma are healthy, in school, and ready to learn. -
Open Airways for Schools
This is an elementary school education program for children with asthma. A key part of the program is the American Lung Association’s (ALA) facilitation of asthma-care partnerships involving school nurses and educational staff as well as physicians, families, and ALA volunteers.
National Association of School Nurses
This association supports the health and educational success of children and youth by developing and providing leadership to advance school nursing practice by specialized registered nurses.
- School Health Nursing Services Role in Health Care: Asthma Management in the School Setting
- The Use of Asthma Rescue Inhalers in the School Setting
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
This site provides you information about the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program and about asthma according to target audience.
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Asthma and Physical Activity in the School: Making a Difference
This site provides a resource for teachers and coaches to help students with asthma participate in sports and physical activities. -
How Asthma Friendly Is Your Childcare Setting?
Children with asthma need proper support in childcare settings to keep their asthma under control and to be fully active. This checklist can help pinpoint specific areas that may cause problems for them. -
Is the Asthma Action Plan Working?—A Tool for School Nurse Assessment
All children with asthma need an asthma action plan. This brief assessment tool offers guidance in determining how well an asthma action plan is working for a student. -
Managing Asthma: A Guide for Schools
This site provides school personnel a booklet describing practical ways to help students with asthma. -
Suggested Emergency Protocol for Students with Asthma Symptoms
Although each student with asthma needs a personal asthma action plan, schools also should have a written emergency care plan for students who do not have a personal plan at school. This template can help develop a district or school protocol.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency—Healthy School Environment Resources
This site provides online resources to help facility managers, school administrators, architects, design engineers, school nurses, parents, and teachers address environmental health issues in schools.
- Links to non-federal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. These links do not constitute an endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the federal government, and none should be inferred. CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at these links.
- Page last reviewed: April 24, 2009
- Page last updated: April 27, 2009
- Content source: National Center for Environmental Health
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