ÎÞÂë×¨Çø

Health Beyond Health Care: ÎÞÂë×¨Çø Children’s Community Engagement

June 2026

Last Summer, 19 teenagers from Delaware — most of whom had never been outside the United States — took a trip to Peru. They hiked to Machu Picchu. They painted and renovated a community center. They visited a farm and learned how fruit and vegetables grown there end up on our tables. They met children whose schools and homes lacked comforts they had taken for granted.Ìý

Through this trip with theÌý, their eyes were opened wide to a world of new possibilities. It made them dream bigger, understand the value of service, and see more clearly who they want to become. This kind of experience can change the trajectory of a child’s life, which is why ÎÞÂë×¨Çø is proud to support this program each year.Ìý

Decades of research show that medical care accounts for only about 15% of a child’s overall health. The other 85% is determined by factors like their diet, the safety of their neighborhood, the quality of their education, and the community around them.Ìý

If we are serious about creating health and not just treating disease, we must address the full 100% — Whole Child Health. ÎÞÂë×¨Çø Community Engagement teams are central to this commitment.
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Feeding Communities

Much of their work connects to one of the biggest unmet needs across America: food.Ìý

We support food banks and pantries in all of our communities and partner in Florida withÌýÌýto help provide weekend meals for students facing food insecurity. During the school year, we help feed more than 500 students at Andrew Robinson Elementary, a Title I school in downtown Jacksonville. On Friday afternoons, each child receives a backpack full of healthy food, ensuring they have nutritious meals over the weekend.

Access to food is only one piece of the puzzle. It is also important children eat healthy diets rich in fruits and vegetables.Ìý

In Delaware, we partnered withÌýÌýto build six school-based gardens. In these gardens, more than 2,300 children planted seeds, tended beds, and harvested 900 pounds of produce last year. They learned how food grows — and how food helps them grow. In Central Florida, we sponsor garden education programs for preschoolers throughÌý, because the habits that shape a lifetime of health begin earlier than most people realize.
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Happy kids with backpack

Students at Andrew Robinson Elementary with their weekend bags.

Filling Gaps in Our Communities

ÎÞÂë×¨Çø provides leadership to create Whole Child Health, but we can’t do it alone. Organizations embedded in each community are critical partners to help us identify needs and fill gaps.Ìý

In Wilmington, Delaware, we partnered withÌýÌýto create a hygiene hub for young women lacking access to basic essentials like body wash, toothpaste, and shampoo. In Pensacola, we work with theÌýÌýand theÌýÌýto train every 11thÌýgrader in the District in hands-only CPR.Ìý

These may seem like small interventions, but they are the building blocks that children need to build overall good health.Ìý
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Summer Break Brings Different Needs

When school lets out for the summer, children’s needs don’t pause — they shift. In Wilmington, that means ensuring kids have safe, structured, and enriching spaces to play and learn. Each summer, ÎÞÂë×¨Çø helps hundreds of children attend summer camps ranging from basketball programs to classic outdoor day camps. There, children learn teamwork, explore science and technology, build new social connections, and develop curiosity and confidence.

ÎÞÂë×¨Çø basketball camp

ÎÞÂë×¨Çø supports a series of summer and winter break basketball camps for children ages 6 to 16, run by the Delaware Blue Coats, the NBA G League affiliate of the Philadelphia 76ers.


In Florida, children are required to get a physical exam before the school year begins. When free community options declined, ÎÞÂë×¨Çø partnered withÌýÌýto provide free annual physicals and electrocardiograms (EKGs) for children involved in extracurricular activities. Our ÎÞÂë×¨Çø clinicians and associates volunteer their time and expertise to run these clinics and also distribute backpacks of school supplies and bags of healthy food.
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Championing Children’s Health

These programs represent a fraction of the hundreds of community partnerships we maintain year-round.Ìý

Children’s health is more than a series of clinic and hospital visits. Much of it is built in kitchens and classrooms, in gardens and gymnasiums, in opportunities and relationships. The 85% of health that happens outside our walls — for our patients and all other children in our communities — is not someone else’s problem to solve. It is ours, and it belongs to all of us collectively.Ìý

That is what our Community Engagement teams do every day. And that is what makes ÎÞÂë×¨Çø not just a health care provider, but a true pediatric health partner anchored in our communities and our nation to improve the health of all children.

R. Lawrence Moss, MD, FACS, FAAP, President and Chief Executive Officer

About Dr. Moss

R. Lawrence Moss, MD, FACS, FAAP is president and CEO of ÎÞÂë×¨Çø Children’s Health. Dr. Moss will write monthly in this space about how children’s hospitals can address health-related social needsÌýand create the healthiest generations of children.