Article on mapping research literature health promotion in schools

Recently the article ‘Health promotion in the school context: a scientific mapping of the literature[1] is published in Health Education (31 October 2024).

The study presents an overview of research literature on health promotion in schools, utilizing metadata extracted from 4,328 publications indexed in the Scopus database over the past 35 years. A bibliometric approach was used to analyze the development and current state of using publication and citation data. A structured keyword search was conducted in the Scopus database to retrieve relevant publications in the field. Frequency counts, rank-ordered tables, and time series charts were used to illustrate the dynamic growth of publication and citation data, the core journals, the leading countries, and the most frequently used keywords in research on health promotion in school contexts. A series of social network analyses was conducted to explore and visualize the social, intellectual, and conceptual structure of the field.

Findings demonstrate that health promotion in school contexts is a growing research field that has gained significant momentum in recent years. The research in this field is widely distributed internationally, but research output is dominated by the US and other English-speaking countries. The study reveals a trend towards increased collaboration among research groups. The level of international collaboration varies. The research field is highly interdisciplinary and the main research themes addressed in the literature include mental health, well-being, and quality of life; health behaviors; oral health education; sexual and reproductive education; and general health promotion and health education in schools. This is the first study to map the development of a research field with growing recognition. It provides a comprehensive overview of the emerging field of health promotion in school contexts and its progress over time, contributing to the organization of the research domain. The study demonstrates the need for a new framework for health promotion research that supports the sustainability of health promotion research in schools.

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