The Importance of Health Education in Schools: Reflections, Representation and Recommendations
Abstract
1. Review
1.1. Introduction
1.2. Defining Health Education and Health Literacy
1.3. Impact
1.4. Impact on Academic Achievement
1.5. International Approaches and Variations
- -
- Finland
- -
- Australia
- -
- United Kingdom
- -
- United States
- -
- Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)
1.6. Whole-School and Community Approaches
1.7. Culturally Responsive Health Education
1.8. Digital Health Literacy and Emerging Themes
1.9. Review Summary
2. Representation
2.1. Empowering Children and Young People to Improve Their Future Healthcare: An English Perspective
2.2. The Potential for Collaboration with Education
2.3. Student Co-Production and Engagement
2.4. Representative Example: Strengthening PSHE with HPV Education
In some Asian cultures it is shameful to talk about anything related to sex, and when it concerns parents and children it is even more sensitive and complex. To start conversations with school-aged children, the school needs to set up a group with an adult mentor. The mentor should have a topic ready for discussion to open conversations. This will need some prior work to set up at school, and children should lead this with the help of an adult of the same gender. [Student, 14 years old]
2.5. Engaging Parents Through Students
Children and parents should be helped to gain better understanding regarding HPV and its importance by professionals involved in providing the HPV vaccine (…) Schools should promote this to students/parents in assemblies through parent information workshops. It could also be promoted through faith settings like madrasa classes where school-aged children attend Islamic studies and workshops in community settings. [Zain’s mother]
2.6. Parental Viewpoint
Recently, my son needed his childhood vaccination record before heading off to university amid a measles outbreak. His red book was lost, and his NHS app showed only COVID-19 vaccinations, so this required interaction with his GP surgery. He couldn’t pluck up courage to phone them himself; it took two data-sharing consent emails, several phone calls and two weeks before he finally accessed his vaccination record through me. While I fully respect his autonomy and privacy in decision-making, I find myself more comfortable, as a parent, with the Gillick Competence model, evolving throughout childhood, than with the presumption of overnight healthcare independence at 16.
3. Future Directions and Potential Policy Recommendations
- National Policy Frameworks: Governments should develop and enforce minimum standards for health education content, delivery, and teacher training.
- Formal Assessment: Introduce summative and formative assessments to evaluate health literacy, especially in areas like digital competence and mental well-being.
- Teacher Training: Provide pre-service and in-service training programmes on evidence-based health education methods.
- Cultural Adaptation: Develop inclusive materials that reflect diverse cultural, linguistic, and religious contexts.
- Monitoring and Evaluation: Invest in longitudinal studies to measure outcomes, identify gaps, and scale successful models.
- Student Participation: Engage young people in curriculum co-design and peer-led initiatives to ensure relevance and ownership.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Challenge | Summary |
|---|---|
| Curriculum overload | Competing academic priorities often marginalise health education, especially in exam-focused systems. |
| Teacher training | Many educators feel ill-equipped to teach sensitive topics such as mental health, sexuality, and substance abuse. |
| Lack of standardisation | Without national guidelines, schools may inconsistently interpret what constitutes adequate health education. |
| Cultural sensitivity | Different cultures’ interpretation of health needs can conflict with current evidence-based policy decisions. |
| Assessment gaps | The lack of formal evaluation mechanisms makes it difficult to monitor outcomes or ensure accountability. |
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© 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Share and Cite
Roland, D.; Ashman, V.; Patel, A.; Blake-Smith, K.; Hiams, L.; Keating, S.; Traynor, A.; Islam, Z.; Miah, N.; Arshad, Q.; et al. The Importance of Health Education in Schools: Reflections, Representation and Recommendations. Future 2026, 4, 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/future4010009
Roland D, Ashman V, Patel A, Blake-Smith K, Hiams L, Keating S, Traynor A, Islam Z, Miah N, Arshad Q, et al. The Importance of Health Education in Schools: Reflections, Representation and Recommendations. Future. 2026; 4(1):9. https://doi.org/10.3390/future4010009
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoland, Damian, Virginia Ashman, Anuj Patel, Katherine Blake-Smith, Laura Hiams, Samantha Keating, Annie Traynor, Zain Islam, Nasima Miah, Qadeer Arshad, and et al. 2026. "The Importance of Health Education in Schools: Reflections, Representation and Recommendations" Future 4, no. 1: 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/future4010009
APA StyleRoland, D., Ashman, V., Patel, A., Blake-Smith, K., Hiams, L., Keating, S., Traynor, A., Islam, Z., Miah, N., Arshad, Q., & Postavaru, G.-I. (2026). The Importance of Health Education in Schools: Reflections, Representation and Recommendations. Future, 4(1), 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/future4010009

