India D. Rose’s research while affiliated with ICF International and other places

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Publications (39)


Challenges With School Meal Provisions in K-12 Public Schools: Findings From the National School COVID-19 Prevention Study
  • Article

July 2024

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19 Reads

The Journal of School Nursing

India Rose

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Caitlin Merlo

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Cherrelle Dorleans

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[...]

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Margaret Applebaum

School meals play a vital role in supporting student health. Access to school meals was disrupted during COVID-19-related school closures, impacting student nutritional intake and household food insecurity. Data from the National School COVID-19 Prevention Study Survey and school staff focus groups were used to examine challenges to school meal provision in K-12 public schools. Data were analyzed using R and MAXQDA. Survey data indicated that most schools served breakfast and lunch in the cafeteria or classroom during the 2021–2022 school year. City schools were less likely to experience challenges with receiving the foods and supplies needed for school meal programs. Qualitative data revealed that school meal participation increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, however schools encountered challenges when implementing the program including staff shortages and supply chain issues. Findings from this study can help strengthen the K-12 school meal system to equitably serve students in future public health emergencies.




Perceived Role of the School Nurse in Providing Pertinent COVID-19 Information to the School Community: Experiences of Public Health Graduate Students With School-Aged Children

August 2023

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7 Reads

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2 Citations

The Journal of School Nursing

The COVID-19 pandemic has been a major disruptor to school systems across the United States since March 2020. As a result, school nurses have had to adapt to these uncertain times. Previous research has demonstrated the impact of school nurses on student health; however, less is known about their role in educating the broader school community about COVID-19 prevention. In Spring 2022, four focus groups were conducted with public health graduate students with school-aged children, to assess perceptions of COVID-19 and public health emergency preparedness communication. MAXQDA was used for thematic analysis. School nurses were viewed as a credible source of COVID-19 information, especially for those who do not have access to healthcare services. While the primary role of school nurses is to provide health services to students, they also have the capacity to provide the community with vital public health emergency preparedness information.


Facilitators and Barriers to Implementing COVID-19 Prevention Strategies in K-12 Public Schools

July 2023

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16 Reads

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2 Citations

The Journal of School Nursing

To meet the educational needs of students, most schools in the United States (U.S.) reopened for in-person instruction during the 2021-2022 school year implementing a wide range of COVID-19 prevention strategies (e.g., mask requirements). To date, there have been limited studies examining facilitators and barriers to implementing each of the recommended COVID-19 prevention strategies in schools. Twenty-one semistructured interviews were conducted with public school staff from across the U.S. responsible for overseeing prevention strategy implementation. MAXQDA was used for thematic analysis. Findings identified key facilitators including utilizing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance and district policies to guide decision-making at the school level, possessing financial resources to purchase supplies, identifying key staff for implementation, and having school health services infrastructure in place. Key barriers included staff shortages, limited resources, and community opposition. Findings from this study provide important insight into how schools can prepare for future public health emergencies.


The Relationship of School Connectedness to Adolescents' Engagement in Co-Occurring Health Risks: A Meta-Analytic Review

April 2022

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189 Reads

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26 Citations

The Journal of School Nursing

School connectedness is an important factor in the lives of youth and are a leverage point for optimizing youth's social, emotional, and physical health. This study presents a meta-analysis examining the relationship between school connectedness and four health domains that are prevalent in adolescence, have implications for adult health, and often co-occur: mental health, sexual health, violence, and high-risk substance use. Ninety articles published between 2009 and 2019 were included in the analysis. The study found that school connectedness had a protective average effect size across all health domains (Hedges' g = -0.345, p-value<0.001). When examined separately, school connectedness had a significant protective relationship with substance use (g = -0.379, p < 0.001), mental health (Hedges' g = -0.358, p < 0.001), violence (Hedges' g = -0.318, p < 0.001), sexual health (Hedges' g = -0.145, p < 0.001), and with co-occurring risks (Hedges' g = -0.331, p < 0.001). These results provide strong evidence that school connectedness has the potential to prevent and mitigate multiple health risks during adolescence.


School district-provided supports to enhance sexual health education among middle and high school health education teachers

June 2020

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79 Reads

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11 Citations

Teaching and Teacher Education

Schools support teachers in their professional learning, just as teachers support students in their learning. To accomplish this, schools can provide support systems that enhance teachers’ knowledge, comfort, and instructional skills. This study examined the impact of two district-provided supports (curriculum and professional development) on sexual health instruction among middle and high school health education teachers. Data were abstracted and analyzed using inductive coding from 24 teacher interviews (2015–2016). Findings illustrate outcomes from both curriculum and PD on teachers’ self-reported knowledge, comfort, and skills. The district-provided supports appeared to contribute to improved teachers’ self-efficacy in delivering sexual health education.


Student-Reported School Safety Perceptions, Connectedness, and Absenteeism Following a Multiple-Fatality School Shooting — Broward County, Florida, February 14–21, 2018
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2020

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125 Reads

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8 Citations

MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report

From July 2009 to June 2018, the rates of multiple-victim, school-associated homicides in the United States fluctuated substantially, with evidence of a significant increase in recent years (1). Data on the effects of such incidents on students' school attendance and perceptions of safety and connectedness are limited (2,3) but important. This study used data from a neighboring within-district school before and after a multiple-fatality shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14, 2018. Self-administered questionnaires were completed by one group of students on February 14 just before the shooting (575) and another group during February 15-21 (502); demographics for these groups appeared similar. Linear and logistic regression analyses controlling for demographic characteristics explored differences between groups for safety-related perceptions or experiences, school connectedness, and absenteeism. Compared with students surveyed before the shooting, students surveyed in the days immediately following the shooting had lower odds of feeling safe at school, higher odds of absenteeism, and higher school connectedness scores. Findings suggest the shooting had an immediate, sizeable effect on safety perceptions and absenteeism among students in a neighboring school. Findings also suggest higher school connectedness following the shooting. Further study of school connectedness, including how to enhance and sustain it, might help schools and communities better respond to traumatic events in the community.

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Key Factors Influencing Comfort in Delivering and Receiving Sexual Health Education: Middle School Student and Teacher Perspectives

June 2019

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169 Reads

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30 Citations

American Journal of Sexuality Education

Sexual health education (SHE) provides students with knowledge and skills to establish healthy relationships, understand sexual development, and prevent risk behaviors; therefore, it is critical to understand how to optimize the delivery and receipt of this education. Using a grounded theory approach, interviews with middle school health education teachers (n = 13) and focus groups with students (n = 41) were conducted to examine factors that influence perceived comfort delivering and receiving SHE in a public-school district. Findings identified key barriers including disruptive behavior, insufficient time, and lack of dedicated classrooms. Some key facilitators to comfort included professional development and establishing ground rules.


The Influence of Health Education Teacher Characteristics on Students' Health‐Related Knowledge Gains

May 2019

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247 Reads

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17 Citations

Journal of School Health

Background: Studies have examined relationships between teacher characteristics and student achievement in courses such as math and science. This study is among the first to examine effects of teacher characteristics on student knowledge in a health course. Methods: Student (N = 6143) pretest and posttest data were linked to teacher (N = 67) data. Changes in student knowledge scores from pre- to postcourse were explored using mixed-effects linear models. Teacher characteristics included professional development (PD) attendance, having a dedicated classroom, certification type, educational background, years' experience, and athletic coaching status. Results: Teacher characteristics associated with greater student knowledge gains included: being certified to teach health versus not certified (p < .001), having a dedicated classroom versus no classroom (p = .017), and for middle school teachers, having attended ≥3 PD sessions versus ≤2 (p = .023). Less knowledge gain was associated with teachers that coached versus noncoaches (p = .040) and having a health degree versus no health degree (p = .049). Post hoc analyses revealed the negative effect of health degree was only significant among coaches (p = .026). Conclusions: Findings suggest opportunities for maximizing student knowledge gains through tailored selection of health teachers and provision of appropriate teaching support.


Citations (29)


... Subtle interactions between infection-protective behaviors and risks may be involved in the increase of COVID-19 in vaccinated individuals [6] [7]. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children/youth further highlighted the important role of school health practitioners in infection control initiatives in schools and campuses [8] [9], and they are viewed as a credible, tailored, and sometimes only source of COVID-19 information [10] [11]. Infection control in university students may have an indirect impact on the COVID-19 burden for other age groups [12], and better understanding of the clinical features of COVID-19 risk in young populations has current and future policy implication not only for COVID-19 but also for the next infectious respiratory disease by a novel virus. ...

Reference:

Symptomatic COVID-19 in University Students: A School-Wide Web-Based Questionnaire Survey during the Omicron Variant Outbreak
Perceived Role of the School Nurse in Providing Pertinent COVID-19 Information to the School Community: Experiences of Public Health Graduate Students With School-Aged Children
  • Citing Article
  • August 2023

The Journal of School Nursing

... Hence, the null hypothesis is accepted, indicating that there is no significant relationship between sex and home remedy preferences among senior high school students. The research study by Rose et al. (2022) suggests that adolescent preferences for home remedies are not influenced by sex, showing that both male and female students commonly adopt these practices. This implies that no significant statistical relationship exists between sex and preference for home remedies. ...

The Relationship of School Connectedness to Adolescents' Engagement in Co-Occurring Health Risks: A Meta-Analytic Review
  • Citing Article
  • April 2022

The Journal of School Nursing

... Some other American institutions may lead collaboration in HEA for different teenage groups. For instance, the University of Texas System's collaborative research centers on school-, classroom-, and community-based health education (Benton et al., 2022;Kintner et al., 2015;Markham et al., 2020); the University of North Carolina's collaborative research focuses on the effectiveness of different HEA approaches in different types of schools and communities (Seitz et al., 2013;Sun et al., 2018); the collaborative research of Harvard University focuses on health education for teenage females and gender-specific groups (Keuroghlian et al., 2017;Strunin et al., 2010); the Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education's main collaborative research areas are health education for teenage African immigrants in the United States (Agbemenu et al., 2018;Puskar et al., 2008); the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention collaborates in the development of HEA in schools and communities, and HEA for specific groups (such as the LGBTQ, which stands for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer), mentally disabled, and physically disabled groups (Rasberry et al., 2022;Szucs et al., 2020Szucs et al., , 2022aWallerstein et al., 2019); the University System of Ohio conducts collaborative research on HEA in high school classrooms and HEA's effects to prevent sexually transmitted diseases among high school teenagers (Herr et al., 2012;In-Iw et al., 2015). In conclusion, institutions in the USA initiate collaborations in various aspects, giving scholars insights into finding suitable collaboration partners in the USA. ...

School district-provided supports to enhance sexual health education among middle and high school health education teachers
  • Citing Article
  • June 2020

Teaching and Teacher Education

... The association found here could be explained by the intensity of distressing memories generated by constant exposure to the site [47]. The experience of an earthquake at home or at another frequently visited location may increase mental burden depending on the level of trauma experienced [48][49][50][51]. Further evidence is needed to explain these differences. ...

Student-Reported School Safety Perceptions, Connectedness, and Absenteeism Following a Multiple-Fatality School Shooting — Broward County, Florida, February 14–21, 2018

MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report

... Despite fifty years of compulsory sexuality education in public schools in Denmark, the policies and practices relating to sexuality education have received surprisingly limited attention in research, and, consequently, remain largely unexplored. (Roien, Graugaard & Simovska, 2022, p. 70) Synthesis of research in the field of sexuality education " […] found that although sex is a potent and a potentially embarrassing topic, schools appear reluctant to acknowledge this and attempt to teach SRE [sex and relationship education] in the same way as other subjects" (Pound et al., 2016, p. 1). 1 As has been pointed out repeatedly in the research literature, teaching about sexuality causes embarrassment and general discomfort among both teachers and students (Pound et al., 2016;Alldred, David & Smith, 2003;Wailing et al., 2020;Mkumbo, 2012;Rose et al., 2019;Helbekkmo et al., 2021). ...

Key Factors Influencing Comfort in Delivering and Receiving Sexual Health Education: Middle School Student and Teacher Perspectives
  • Citing Article
  • June 2019

American Journal of Sexuality Education

... The schools play only a marginal or inert role as external entities such as NGOs or other stakeholders run the awareness programs. The key in uencers in the schools are the teachers, but they remain bystanders during such programs that undermines the sustainability of the awareness efforts (34). Moreover, studies recommended implementing regular awareness programs ideally on a quarterly or semi-annual basis as one-time external interventions may lose their impact over time (35,36). ...

The Influence of Health Education Teacher Characteristics on Students' Health‐Related Knowledge Gains
  • Citing Article
  • May 2019

Journal of School Health

... Research points out that social media has become a tool to build internal capacity and psychological well-being as well as democratize, amplify, and share experiences around sexuality [5]. Two mostly seen topics are gender identity and sexual orientation on social media [6]. In China, social media develops at a speed that beyond everyone's imagination, and there is no doubt that it has inevitable and significant change to sex education among Chinese teenagers. ...

Framing gender identity and sexual orientation: media influence on young men who have sex with men’s health
  • Citing Article
  • December 2018

... Inadequate health literacy has been linked to older people making inappropriate health choices potentially leading to poorer quality-of-care (MacLeod et al., 2017). In addition, higher levels of health literacy have been strongly linked with better cognitive health and a reduced incidence of development of dementia (Choi et al., 2018). In one systematic review of health literacy in Alzheimer's dementia, Rostamzadeh et al. (2020) reported that limited research related to the knowledge about HL in those at increased risk of dementia presently exists. ...

How Is Literacy Being Defined and Measured in Dementia Research? A Scoping Review

... However, the same authors pointed out that LGBT youth are more likely to suffer homophobic victimization and feel more insecure. 23 Thus, bullied young people perceive their schools as unsafe, and are therefore more likely to have more difficulty recovering from the traumatic effects of bullying. 24 Kosciw, Greytak, Zongrone, Clark and Truong, showed that students felt insecure in school, 59.5% due to their sexual orientation, 44.6% due to gender expression and 35.0% ...

Sex Differences in School Safety and Bullying Experiences Among Sexual Minority Youth
  • Citing Article
  • March 2018

The Journal of School Nursing

... This could introduce bias such as prioritising more academic students. Whilst we trained school staff for this, researchers should oversee this task more closely with enhanced instructions [30][31][32]. ...

Overcoming Challenges in School-Wide Survey Administration
  • Citing Article
  • September 2017

Health Promotion Practice