Getting to Education Outcomes: Reviewing Evidence from Health and Education Interventions

Authors: Daniel Plaut, Tara Hill, Milan Thomas, Jordan Worthington, Meena Fernandes, Nicholas Burnett

Citation:
Plaut, D. , Hill, T. , Thomas, M. , Worthington, J. , Fernandes, M. , et. al. . “Getting to Education Outcomes: Reviewing Evidence from Health and Education Interventions”. In: Disease Control Priorities (third edition): Volume 8, Child and Adolescent Health and Development, edited by D. Bundy , N. de Silva , S. Horton , D. T. Jamison , G. Patton . Washington, DC: World Bank.
Plaut, D. , Hill, T. , Thomas, M. , Worthington, J. , Fernandes, M. , et. al. . “Getting to Education Outcomes: Reviewing Evidence from Health and Education Interventions”. In: Disease Control Priorities (third edition): Volume 8, Child and Adolescent Health and Development, edited by D. Bundy , N. de Silva , S. Horton , D. T. Jamison , G. Patton . Washington, DC: World Bank.
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Abstract:

The theoretical role of health interventions in increasing education access and quality is outlined in this chapter. The authors survey evidence from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) on the extent to which common education interventions and school-based health interventions improve education outcomes, by considering the potential of primary and secondary schools to serve as platforms for health interventions and focusing on interventions targeting middle childhood through adolescence (ages 5–19 years). Over the past several decades, efforts to fight infectious diseases and malnutrition have increased alongside attempts to enroll children in basic education, demonstrating a global commitment to equity and quality in child health and education. These interventions can prove complementary, and improvements in access to quality education have contributed to preventing disease. About 7.3 million lives were saved between 2010 and 2015 in LMICs because of increases in educational attainment since 1990. Poor health remains linked to poor student outcomes, as disease and malnutrition reduce children’s capacity to attend school and their ability to learn, particularly in poor communities lacking quality education services.