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What is The School Health Research Network?

Every two years, schools complete a bilingual electronic Student Health and Wellbeing Survey, based on the World Health Organisation’s collaborative Healthy Behaviour of School-aged Children survey.

The results of the survey are then used to inform schools about the health and wellbeing of their students.

SHRN also use the data to produce research evidence on how best to improve young people’s health and wellbeing in schools, along with helping schools to understand this evidence and how it can be used.

The School Health Research Network (SHRN) is the largest national network of its kind in the world. It brings together all of the maintained, mainstream primary and secondary schools in Wales with academic researchers, policy-makers and practitioners from health, education and social care to promote an evidence informed approach to improving young people’s health and wellbeing in the school setting.

SHRN is a partnership between Welsh Government (Health and Education), Public Health Wales (PHW), Cancer Research UK and WISERD (the Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data and Methods). It is led by the Centre for Development, Evaluation, Complexity and Implementation in Public Health Improvement (DECIPHer) at Cardiff University. This partnership facilitates strategic alignment of policy, research and practice agendas.

Network schools complete a bilingual, electronic Student Health and Wellbeing Survey every two years. The survey is based on the World Health Organization’s collaborative Health Behaviour of School-aged Children (HBSC) Survey to allow integration of the two surveys every four years. Student data collection routinely includes over 65% of all 11 to 16 year olds in Wales from over 90% of schools. It is accompanied by a School Environment Questionnaire, which allows relationships between school policies and practices and student health outcomes to be investigated.

The Network ensures that the research is of relevance to stakeholders so that subsequent research evidence has a higher likelihood of influencing policy and practice for population health impacts. SHRN adopted studies have a value of over £25 million. 

PARTNERS

The 211 schools in the School Health Research Network are joined by our partners.

Find out about our partners

SCHOOLS


Schools in the School Health Research Network receive a number of benefits.

What benefits are included?

ADVISORY BOARD


The Advisory Board role is to critically review the strategy and activities of the network.

Learn more about our Advisory Board