Adolescence (10–19 years), as defined by the World Health Organization, is a critical stage of rapid physical, emotional, and behavioural change, during which schoolchildren are increasingly exposed to cardiometabolic risk factors related to unhealthy diets, sedentary lifestyles, psychosocial stress, obesity, family history, and insulin resistance.
In Sri Lanka, school health promotion is delivered through the Medical Officer of Health (MOH) system and supported by initiatives such as the Clean Sri Lanka School Programme. However, these programmes are often insufficient to address behaviour-driven cardiometabolic risks and are not specifically tailored to the unique needs of adolescents.
To bridge this gap, the Urban School Health Promotion Programme, specifically designed for adolescents, was developed as a comprehensive, activity-based intervention focusing on health awareness and behavioural change communication within schools.
The programme is funded by the International Medical Health Organization (IMHO), with logistical support and administrative approval from the Jaffna Medical Association (JMA) for an initial two-year period, with continuation planned based on evaluation outcomes. It is guided by Dr. M. Aravinthan, Consultant Endocrinologist, as the Content Expert, and Prof. S. Kumaran, Consultant Family Physician, as the Implementation Expert.
To promote healthy lifestyles among adolescents by improving dietary habits, physical activity, and psychosocial wellbeing through a structured, interactive, and school-based health promotion programme, while strengthening peer and family support systems and generating evidence to inform sustainable school health policies.
The programme is implemented in selected urban schools, namely Jaffna Hindu College, Jaffna St. John’s College, Jaffna Chundikuli Girls’ College, Jaffna Hartley College, and Jaffna Vembadi Girls’ High School, Jaffna Kokuvil Hindu College targeting students in Grades 9 and 10. Following one month of intensive facilitator training conducted by subject experts, ongoing capacity-building support is provided periodically in accordance with stakeholders’ feedback.
A pre-assessment phase established baseline health status using BMI measurements and data on physical activity and breakfast consumption, collected via Kobo Collector and analysed using SPSS. Findings revealed a dual burden of undernutrition and overweight/obesity, irregular breakfast habits, and uneven participation in physical activity, highlighting the need for a structured, equitable, and sustainable school-based intervention programme.
The intervention programme consists of 20 one-hour, theme-based sessions per school, delivered as one session per week to groups of 80–100 students using peer-based behavioural change strategies, social motivation and positive reinforcement strategies involving the family, school and peers. Sessions are group-based, competitive with marking system, highly interactive and include poster preparation, drama, role-play, debate, games, dance, music, poetry, and painting to promote experiential learning.
Core themes include: –

