Where are we now? The intersection of healthy living medicine and social justice within our school systems

Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 2022 Mar-Apr:71:43-50. doi: 10.1016/j.pcad.2022.04.013. Epub 2022 May 24.

Abstract

Alongside the tensions brought forth by the pandemic, such as health and safety concerns from transmission and economic insecurity, there was also a rise in racial and social tension, bringing issues of equity and justice to the forefront. Consequently, there has been a call for reform and an urgency for change in legal, political, economic, and healthcare spheres. Change only occurs through change, with a pivotal point to target the beginning stages in life which will have a greater likelihood to subsist throughout the lifecourse. The crossroads of healthy living medicine (HLM) and education are an appropriate context for necessary change. If healthy living medicine is to embody the ideals of social justice, then people need equal access to resources of well-being - physical, social, and emotional - in their school systems. This paper examines the current intersection of health and social justice within the school systems in the United States. It is both a critique of how school systems have not yet provided such an intersection and highlight those efforts that have proven valuable and successful in providing HLM resources to populations that are historically under-resourced and under-served. Ultimately, this paper looks to provide a path forward, providing ideas for sustainable, feasible, actionable change in school systems K-12 and in higher education.

Keywords: Nutrition; Physical activity; Schools; Social justice.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Delivery of Health Care
  • Healthy Lifestyle
  • Humans
  • Pandemics
  • Schools*
  • Social Justice*
  • United States