PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Book prepares K-12 leaders for the next public health crisis

2025-12-16
(Press-News.org) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In a new book, a team of experts in educational policy, epidemiology and public health chronicles the challenges faced by educators, public health authorities and school officials during the COVID-19 pandemic and offers a guide to some of the lessons learned as K-12 schools weathered that crisis. One key message: Collaboration between schools, public health authorities and community leaders is essential to success.

The book, “K-12 Schools and Public Health Partnerships: Strategies for Navigating a Crisis with Trust, Equity, and Communication,” describes the enormous challenges schools faced when the World Health Organization declared in March 2020 that COVID-19 was a global pandemic. School district leaders across the U.S. “had to make rapid decisions about school closures, remote learning plans, staff safety, student meal distribution and communication with anxious families — all while working with limited information and unclear guidance,” the authors wrote.

The four co-authors were themselves drawn into the crisis. Each provided their own leadership and expertise to decision-makers in public health and schools and observed the successes and failures of efforts in their communities. During the peak of the crisis, Leah Perkinson, a pandemics manager at The Rockefeller Foundation and a former researcher at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, led national pandemic response efforts, coordinated communities of practice and compiled public health guidance documents. Lisa C. Barrios, currently the director of the Division of Readiness and Response Science at the CDC, led activities to help schools prevent, mitigate and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign pathobiology professor Rebecca Lee Smith, an epidemiologist, advised those working to track and reduce the spread of infection in schools and businesses across Illinois. Rachel Roegman, a professor of education policy, organization and leadership at the U. of I. whose work focuses on how to make schools more affirming spaces for potentially marginalized students, saw how inequities in school communities could exacerbate the tragic toll of the disease.

The book includes dozens of interviews with school, public health and community leaders who played key roles in responding to the crisis in K-12 schools, harvesting a trove of useful insights and practical guidance. The book focuses on the importance of building trust, prioritizing the needs of those most at risk and building accurate and reliable communication channels. These factors were intertwined and foundational to success, the authors wrote.  

The best way to build trust was to make an effort to reach out to families and students to ask them what they needed — and finding resources to meet those needs, the authors wrote. During the COVID-19 pandemic, this meant offering students the laptops essential for online learning and showing them how to connect, creating Wi-Fi hubs for neighborhoods that lacked them, developing new systems for distributing school lunches and offering in-person learning hubs for students whose parents were essential workers.

Building trust and enhancing communication also meant creating accessible online dashboards that offered up-to-date testing and infection-rate data for the community along with information about how to access testing sites or services. Communication also was enhanced when community organizations, schools and political leaders coordinated their efforts and collaborated on messaging to speak with one voice.

Serving those most at risk of harm from the pandemic meant planning centered on those with disabilities, those speaking languages other than English and low-income or undocumented families. “Planning from the margins” meant that no one was treated as an afterthought or left out of the public health equation, the authors wrote.

The book also describes how leaders dealt with public criticism of their efforts and the spread of misinformation. It helped when community institutions joined forces to put out unified messages, admitted to uncertainty and acknowledged that guidance sometimes changes in the face of new information. It also helped when they showed up and truly listened to community concerns. And, in some circumstances, the best approach was to avoid amplifying misleading claims by debating them. Instead, the most effective teams remained committed to their essential messages.

To keep kids in school, safe and learning during the next public health crisis, the authors urge communities to continue the partnerships that developed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Building and maintaining those relationships and their outreach to the community is foundational to surviving and navigating the next crisis in K-12 schools, they wrote.

 

***

Editor’s note:  

To reach Leah Perkinson, email leahperkinson@gmail.com

To reach Lisa C. Barrios, email lisa_barrios@yahoo.com

To reach Rachel Roegman, email roegman@illinois.edu

To reach Rebecca Smith, email rlsdvm@illinois.edu  

The book “K-12 Schools and Public Health Partnerships: Strategies for Navigating a Crisis with Trust, Equity, and Communication” is available for purchase online.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Storms in the Southern Ocean mitigates global warming

2025-12-16
Intense storms that sweep over the Southern Ocean enable the ocean to absorb more heat from the atmosphere. New research from the University of Gothenburg shows that today’s climate models underestimate how storms mix the ocean and thereby give less reliable future projections of our climate. The Southern Ocean is a vast expanse of ocean encircling the Antarctic continent, regulating Earth’s climate by moving heat, carbon, and nutrients out in the world’s oceans. It provides a critical climate service by absorbing over 75 per cent of the excess heat generated by humans globally. The Southern Ocean’s capacity to reduce climate warming depends on how efficiently ...

Seals on the move: Research reveals key data for offshore development and international ecology

2025-12-16
New research led by the University of St Andrews has created the most comprehensive maps to date of the distribution of grey and harbour seals in Northwest Europe, encompassing the majority of seal populations on the continental shelf. The research, published today (16th Dec) in Journal of Applied Ecology, combined GPS data from over 840 seals tracked in the waters of seven European countries (UK, Ireland, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, and Denmark) with counts of seals hauled out on land to generate at-sea density maps for both species. The study, ...

Sports injuries sustained during your period might be more severe

2025-12-16
The menstrual cycle is a key physiological process in women: it impacts performance, neuromuscular control, metabolism, and immune response. For professional female athletes, fluctuations in hormones that happen throughout the menstrual cycle could impact risk of injury. Now, researchers in Spain and the UK have set out to examine whether menstruation determined injury incidence or severity in professional female football players. They published their results in Frontiers in Sports and Active Living. “We show that menstruation itself does not increase how often injuries happen,” said first author Dr Eva Ferrer, who specializes in sports medicine at Sant ...

World's first successful 2 Tbit/s free-space optical communication using small optical terminals mountable on satellites and HAPS

2025-12-16
Highlights - World's first achievement of 2 Tbit/s free-space optical communication using small optical terminals that can be mounted on satellites and High Altitude Platform Stations (HAPS) - Maintained stable optical communication between two types of small terminals separated by 7.4 km in an urban environment with atmospheric turbulence - Marked a major step forward in the practical application of Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) for Beyond 5G/6G   Abstract The National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT, President: TOKUDA ...

Can intimate relationships affect your heart? New study says ‘yes’

2025-12-16
With heart disease as the leading cause of death worldwide, there is growing recognition that recovery is not only physical but also emotional and social. A new study shows that strong and supportive relationships can indeed improve heart health for individuals with cardiovascular disease. The work is described in an article in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, published by Elsevier, which calls for intimate partners to be included in cardiac rehabilitation programs to support long-term heart health and quality of life for both members of the couple. An evaluation ...

Scalable and healable gradient textiles for multi‑scenario radiative cooling via bicomponent blow spinning

2025-12-16
As heat waves intensify, keeping people, packages and gadgets cool without extra energy is climbing the global tech wish-list. A Donghua–Jiangnan University team led by Prof. Chao Zhang and Prof. Tianxi Liu now unveils a single-step bicomponent blow-spinning route that delivers kilometre-scale rolls of an ultra-flexible, self-healing micro-fibre textile engineered with two built-in gradients—one in fibre diameter (2.0 → 0.3 µm) and the other in polymer chemistry (PVDF → PMMA). The dual-gradient architecture behaves like a Janus optical engine: the sun-facing side reflects 98.7 % of solar irradiance while beaming 95 % mid-IR radiation to outer space; ...

Research shows informed traders never let a good climate crisis go to waste

2025-12-16
It’s serious business for the world establishing a framework to limit the impact of climate change, but for some, market responses to the annual United Nations Conference of Parties (COP) climate negotiations are also a chance to make some serious money.  In a paper recently published in the journal Energy Economics, an Australian research team has analysed the activity around COP meetings of “informed traders”, referring to any investor acting on non-public information that enables them to trade ahead of the market.  “We found that fossil ...

Intelligent XGBoost framework enhances asphalt pavement skid resistance assessment

2025-12-16
Researchers have developed a novel AI-driven framework using the XGBoost algorithm to accurately evaluate the skid resistance of asphalt pavements under various conditions. Published in Smart Construction, this breakthrough achieves over 90% prediction accuracy, offering a smarter and more adaptive approach to enhancing road safety and maintenance. Skid resistance is a critical factor for asphalt pavement durability and traffic safety, particularly under wet or extreme weather conditions. However, traditional evaluation methods, such as sand patch measurements or pendulum tests, often struggle with generalization across different pavement types and face challenges in quantifying ...

Dual-function biomaterials for postoperative osteosarcoma: Tumor suppression and bone regeneration

2025-12-16
Background Osteosarcoma is the most prevalent primary malignant bone tumor in children and adolescents. The current standard treatment involves a combination of chemotherapy and radical surgical resection. This approach, however, confronts two major clinical challenges: a high risk of postoperative recurrence and metastasis, and the creation of extensive bone defects that severely impair functional recovery and long-term quality of life. The advancement of biomaterials technology offers a promising strategy to address these dual challenges concurrently. These materials can function as localized ...

New framework reveals where transport emissions concentrate in Singapore

2025-12-16
Compact, mixed-use districts are often assumed to naturally produce cleaner travel patterns, but the reality on the ground is far more complex.   In Singapore, for instance, two adjacent employment hubs—One-North and Science Park—share similar locations but differ sharply in how people move through them. A new study from the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) reveals why and offers a high-resolution approach to understanding where emissions accumulate within districts rather than across entire cities.   Published in a research paper titled “A spatial framework for estimating transport emissions at the district scale: A ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

This new understanding of T cell receptors may improve cancer immunotherapies

A new fossil face sheds light on early migrations of ancient human ancestor

A new immunotherapy approach could work for many types of cancer

A new way to diagnose deadly lung infections and save lives

40 percent of MRI signals do not correspond to actual brain activity

How brain-inspired algorithms could drive down AI energy costs

Gum disease may be linked to plaque buildup in arteries, higher risk of major CVD events

Contrails are a major driver of aviation’s climate impact

Structure of dopamine-releasing neurons relates to the type of circuits they form for smell-processing

Reducing social isolation protects the brain in later life   

Keeping the heart healthy increases longevity even after cancer

Young adults commonly mix cannabis with nicotine and tobacco

Comprehensive review illuminates tau protein's dual nature in brain health, disease, and emerging psychiatric connections

Book prepares K-12 leaders for the next public health crisis

Storms in the Southern Ocean mitigates global warming

Seals on the move: Research reveals key data for offshore development and international ecology

Sports injuries sustained during your period might be more severe

World's first successful 2 Tbit/s free-space optical communication using small optical terminals mountable on satellites and HAPS

Can intimate relationships affect your heart? New study says ‘yes’

Scalable and healable gradient textiles for multi‑scenario radiative cooling via bicomponent blow spinning

Research shows informed traders never let a good climate crisis go to waste

Intelligent XGBoost framework enhances asphalt pavement skid resistance assessment

Dual-function biomaterials for postoperative osteosarcoma: Tumor suppression and bone regeneration

New framework reveals where transport emissions concentrate in Singapore

NTP-enhanced lattice oxygen activation in Ce-Co catalysts for low-temperature soot combustion

Synergistic interface engineering in Cu-Zn-Ce catalysts for efficient CO2 hydrogenation to methanol

COVID-19 leaves a lasting mark on the human brain

Scientists use ultrasound to soften and treat cancer tumors without damaging healthy tissue

Community swimming program for Black youth boosts skills, sense of belonging, study finds

Specific depressive symptoms in midlife linked to increased dementia risk

[Press-News.org] Book prepares K-12 leaders for the next public health crisis