Friday 14 August 2015

Nurses in schools help students stay healthy

By Carolyn Khew, The Straits Times, 13 Aug 2015

Nurses like Ms Ruth Tan are based full-time in schools to help students quit smoking or lose weight.

The Student Health Advisor (SHA) Programme that she is a part of helped 3,700 students last year, more than three times the number when it started in 2010.

The Health Promotion Board (HPB) has a variety of preventive health programmes and activities for students. The Student...
Posted by Ministry of Health on Wednesday, August 12, 2015


Yesterday, the Health Promotion Board announced plans to expand the scheme from 20 secondary schools, all three Institute of Technical Education (ITE) colleges and four polytechnics now to 50 secondary schools and all five polytechnics by 2018. The smoking-cessation programme lasts three months and the weight-loss scheme is for six months.

"It can be a challenge to remain unconditionally positive towards the youth smokers and to be consistently patient with them," said Ms Tan, 49. "There is a need to make sessions interesting and relevant... I (also) follow up with students through phone calls or text messages to remind them about their appointments."

The adviser also conducts health screenings for students and helps those with conditions like asthma and diabetes. Students are referred to the programme by teachers and counsellors, or can make their own appointments with the advisers.



Yesterday, Associate Professor Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, Parliamentary Secretary at the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Transport, visited ITE College Central in Ang Mo Kio to speak to advisers and students who have participated in the programme.

Titus Chia, 18, who studies early childhood education at the Institute of Technical Education College Central, had been smoking for three years before he was referred to the programme in February. "The adviser gave me a toy to keep my hands occupied, so I would play with it in place of cigarettes," said Titus, who has stopped smoking. "It was difficult initially, but my loved ones were a motivation for me to quit smoking."


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