CDC’s school health program is a proven, cost-effective way to improve adolescent health and wellbeing and delivers results for just $7 per student while reaching over 20 million students. If funding for CDC school health programs is cut, the following impacts will occur:
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Data from the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System, the largest youth health survey in the U.S. with more than 5 million students participating in 35 years, will cease. YRBS is relied upon by the federal government, states, localities, and tribes to identify problems and track progress. Without YRBS, we lose the ability to identify emerging problems.
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Data from CDC’s School Health Profiles, the only tool that has tracked school health policies and practices such as prohibiting advertisements for candy, fast food restaurants, or soft drinks in school, across the U.S. for the past 25 years, will cease. This would also end our ability to track emerging policies of interest such as student cell phone bans in schools.
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States and localities will have nearly $20 million less to support a data-driven approach to empower schools, parents, families, and community partners to promote youth health. Specifically,
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Programs that led to significant declines in risky health behaviors among high school students including substance use, symptoms of depression, suicide attempts, and violence, will cease.
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Programs that led to increased availability of healthier foods and beverages, better case management of chronic conditions, and a 39% jump in physical activity programs in schools, will cease.
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Defunding CDC’s school health programs will eliminate the free, publicly available tools and resources that states and local communities rely on to implement school-based, data-driven strategies for healthy youth.
Youth Physical and Mental Health is at a Crisis
America’s adolescents are struggling—and without DASH, we risk turning a crisis into a catastrophe.
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60% of U.S. high school students report symptoms of depression.
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75% do not meet basic physical activity guidelines.
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Over 50% of 18-year-olds are ineligible for military service due to physical, mental, or behavioral health conditions.
Cutting DASH means cutting critical supports when youth are most vulnerable.
Why This Matters
Defunding DASH doesn’t just harm students now—it sets us all back in the future.
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Poor physical and mental health habits in youth carry into adulthood, driving unsustainable healthcare costs.
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Healthy students are better learners, more likely to graduate, and more likely to thrive as adults—academically, economically, and emotionally.
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Supporting adolescent health provides a triple return on investment: healthier kids today, healthier adults tomorrow, and healthier families for generations.
DASH is Efficient, Effective, and Irreplaceable
DASH is a proven, cost-effective solution—delivering results for just $7 per student while reaching over 20 million students.
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DASH provides the largest youth health surveillance system in the U.S., with over 5 million survey responses collected over 35 years.
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It enables data-driven action and funds interventions proven to reduce risky behaviors and improve youth health outcomes.
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While CDC publishes extensively on YRBS data, the field more broadly accounts for 80% of publications.
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In just two years (2018–2020), DASH funding helped schools:
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Increase implementation of physical activity programs by 39%.
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Expand case management for students with chronic conditions by 14%.
Without DASH, State and Local Successes Would be Compromised
Eliminating DASH would dismantle success stories across the nation:
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In Palm Beach County, FL, 91.8% of school staff were trained in Youth Mental Health First Aid—impacting nearly 190,000 students.
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Oklahoma’s Painted Play Spaces increased student physical activity by 26.7%.
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Shelby County, TN saw a 150% jump in school-based health clinic usage after student-led outreach.
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Montana used DASH data to shape statewide cannabis advertising policy—protecting youth from harmful messaging.
Bottom Line
Defunding DASH means:
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Flying blind without reliable youth health data.
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Abandoning 20 plus million students in need.
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Sacrificing public health, educational achievement, military readiness, and our nation’s future.
Now is not the time to pull back—now is the time to invest. See more information.
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