In a significant advance for public health within educational environments, 221 schools across Colorado encompassing early childhood, elementary, middle, and high school settings have achieved recognition under the Colorado Asthma-Friendly School program for the 2025-2026 academic year. This initiative is emblematic of a broader commitment to implement robust asthma management frameworks within educational institutions, directly aiming to minimize asthma-related complications and create safer, healthier learning spaces for children susceptible to respiratory conditions. This program operates under the auspices of Children’s Hospital Colorado, integrating with the comprehensive Colorado Comprehensive School-Centered Asthma Program (AsthmaCOMP) to foster systemic improvements.
Asthma continues to be a prevalent chronic respiratory condition and remains a leading cause of school absenteeism in the United States, disproportionately affecting children in minority communities including Black, Hispanic, American Indian, and Alaska Native populations. Scientific studies have repeatedly illustrated these disparities, underscoring the urgent need for targeted interventions addressing these inequities in asthma care. By identifying and supporting asthma-friendly schools, the program aims to reduce these disparities by promoting equitable access to asthma education, management resources, and environmental modifications within school settings.
The recognition of schools is based on the implementation of evidence-based strategies encompassing four critical domains: enhancing school health services to ensure maximal support for asthmatic students; delivering comprehensive asthma education to school staff, students, and families to foster awareness and self-management skills; promoting healthy school environments, including air quality improvements and triggers reduction; and optimizing management of physical education and physical activity to balance exercise benefits with asthma control. Schools achieving these standards are awarded a tiered recognition—gold, silver, or bronze—depending on their level of compliance and implementation thoroughness.
This initiative has galvanized engagement across Colorado’s educational system, resulting in 24 school districts earning distinction, representing over 10% of districts statewide. Notably, all 71 schools within the Cherry Creek School District, along with 28 schools in the Thompson School District, met the stringent criteria, highlighting their leadership in proactive asthma care integration. Such widespread participation underscores an emergent culture in which school districts are recognizing the critical intersection between student health and academic success.
Integral to the program’s implementation are 137 school nurses who serve as frontline champions for asthma management, deploying best practices standardized by the AsthmaCOMP framework. These healthcare professionals conduct asthma assessments, coordinate individualized health plans, and ensure adequate medication availability during school hours, which collectively contribute to reducing asthma attacks, minimizing emergency visits, and improving overall student attendance and performance.
Melanie Gleason, a physician assistant at Children’s Hospital Colorado and associate director of AsthmaCOMP, emphasizes the importance of this milestone, articulating that the initiative’s success is emblematic of the collaborative efforts of schools, healthcare professionals, and community stakeholders. This collaboration exemplifies a shift towards integrating healthcare delivery within educational systems to address chronic disease management comprehensively.
The process for achieving asthma-friendly status involves rigorous evaluation and adoption of asthma management protocols aligned with current clinical guidelines. These protocols include individualized asthma action plans, staff training on inhaler techniques, environmental assessments to identify and mitigate asthma triggers such as allergens and pollutants, and ongoing monitoring of student health outcomes. Such multifaceted approaches embody the latest evidence-based practices aimed at reducing exacerbations and ensuring continuous physical activity participation without undue risk.
Further adding to the program’s depth are asthma health navigators positioned in over 50 schools within urban districts such as Aurora, Denver, Brighton, Englewood, Mapleton, and Sheridan, with plans to extend services to Jefferson County. These navigators bridge gaps between students, families, and healthcare systems, facilitating education, supporting adherence to treatment regimens, and addressing barriers such as transportation or socioeconomic challenges that impede effective asthma control.
schools recognized as asthma-friendly benefit not only in terms of health outcomes but also through enhanced community trust and engagement. Stronger partnerships between schools and families emerge from transparent communication about asthma management practices and collaborative problem-solving efforts. Moreover, these programs enhance staff confidence in managing asthma emergencies, thus fostering safer, more inclusive learning environments that accommodate children with chronic health needs.
The Colorado Asthma-Friendly Schools program is just one component of the broader AsthmaCOMP initiative funded by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s Cancer, Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Disease grant program. This substantial investment ensures sustained, statewide capacity to address asthma morbidity through integrated care models that extend beyond hospitals into community settings, reinforcing public health infrastructure.
At the systemic level, this work aligns with the priorities of various stakeholders, including university research leaders such as Dr. Heather De Keyser from the University of Colorado, state education agencies, and environmental regulatory bodies. Their cooperative framework exemplifies an interdisciplinary approach combining clinical expertise, educational policy, and environmental science to mitigate asthma triggers and improve pediatric respiratory health comprehensively.
With the invitation to schools to apply for the next cycle of recognition by March 1, 2027, stakeholders anticipate increased participation and further refinement of asthma management practices. This cyclical evaluative process ensures continual enhancement, data-driven policy adjustments, and expanded reach, potentially serving as a replicable model for other states seeking to integrate healthcare and education for chronic disease management.
Collectively, these coordinated efforts illustrate a progressive model that leverages educational institutions as pivotal venues for pediatric health intervention. By embedding asthma management into school culture, policy, and practice, Colorado is advancing a paradigm that holds promise to transform outcomes for children with asthma, reducing both the burden of disease and the educational disruptions it imposes. As other regions aim to replicate this success, the program provides robust evidence that multidisciplinary collaboration and comprehensive health strategies in schools yield measurable benefits for children’s health and educational attainment.
Subject of Research:
Asthma management and recognition programs within schools to improve pediatric respiratory health and reduce health disparities
Article Title:
Colorado Schools Achieve Asthma-Friendly Recognition, Marking a Milestone in Pediatric Respiratory Health Management
News Publication Date:
May 5, 2026
Web References:
https://www.childrenscolorado.org/doctors-and-departments/departments/breathing-institute/programs/asthma/community-initiatives/
https://www.childrenscolorado.org/
Image Credits:
Children’s Hospital Colorado
Keywords:
Asthma, pediatric respiratory health, school health services, chronic disease management, asthma disparities, educational programs, public health, asthma-friendly schools, community health initiatives, asthma education, school nurses, asthma management protocols

