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Back-to-School Health Starts Before the First Bell: Why Vaccines, Wellness Visits, and Preventive Care Matter

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    July 14, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Fresh notebooks, new shoes and a carefully negotiated bedtime may signal that school is near, but the smartest back-to-school purchase cannot be placed in a shopping cart: good health. Before Houston-area students race toward classrooms, band halls, football fields and college dormitories, families should make preventive care part of the preparation.

That means reviewing immunization records, scheduling a well-child visit, managing asthma and allergies, addressing emotional or developmental concerns, and completing sports or marching-band physical forms. Legacy Community Health’s message is refreshingly practical: school readiness begins with the whole child, not simply the school-supply list. Its “Health Beyond Care” approach connects pediatric care, family medicine, behavioral health, pharmacy and specialty services so families can address multiple needs before the first bell rings.

History has already shown what prevention can accomplish. Measles was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000 after widespread use of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine. Yet elimination did not mean extinction. As of July 9, 2026, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 2,231 confirmed measles cases across the country, with 93 percent linked to outbreaks. CDC also reported that MMR coverage among U.S. kindergarteners fell from 95.2 percent in 2019–2020 to 92.5 percent in 2024–2025. In public health, a few percentage points can become a very loud alarm bell.

“Vaccines don’t just protect one person at a time — they strengthen the health of everyone around us,” said Dr. Rubina Khan, Medical Director of Pediatrics at Legacy Community Health. She added that Legacy is committed to making preventive care accessible and affordable “so no one falls through the cracks.”

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That community protection matters in classrooms, where children learn, eat, play and share nearly everything except personal space. Texas school requirements vary by grade, but the state currently lists vaccines including DTaP or Tdap, polio, MMR, hepatitis B, varicella, meningococcal and hepatitis A among K–12 requirements. Because requirements can change, the Texas Department of State Health Services advises parents to confirm that students have the proper immunizations for the coming school year.

A wellness visit does far more than check a box. It gives families time to discuss sleep, nutrition, growth, school performance, mental health, medications and chronic conditions. Catching a concern early is usually easier—and far less dramatic—than meeting it later in an emergency room. Parents can also ask a clinician which vaccines are recommended for their child’s age, health history and activities.

Student-athletes and marching-band participants should not wait until the first practice to discover that paperwork is missing. The University Interscholastic League has approved its Athletic and Marching Band Pre-participation Physical Evaluation for the 2026–2027 school year. A physical can help identify issues that may affect safe participation while giving young people a healthier start to the season.

Teenagers and college-bound students deserve equal attention. Families should review Tdap, HPV and meningococcal protection with a trusted healthcare provider, particularly before dormitory living, travel or other close-contact settings. Texas requires many entering college students to show proof of a recent meningococcal vaccination, generally administered within the previous five years and at least 10 days before the semester begins.

Dr. Tamisha Jones, Chief Medical Officer at Legacy Community Health, cautions against assuming yesterday’s public-health victories guarantee tomorrow’s protection. “Despite the fact that vaccines have reduced and eliminated deadly diseases, outbreaks still occur,” she said, emphasizing the continued importance of vaccination and informed conversations with healthcare professionals.

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For working parents, access can be the hardest part of prevention. Legacy’s School-Based Health Care Clinics bring wellness visits, vaccinations, sports physicals, acute care, chronic-disease management and behavioral-health services closer to students. The organization reports 39 school-based clinics across Greater Houston, helping reduce transportation barriers, missed work and lost classroom time.

The takeaway is simple: sharpen the pencils, label the backpacks—and schedule the appointment. A healthier student is better positioned to attend, participate, concentrate and thrive. Back-to-school health is not extra credit. It is the foundation for a successful year.

More Information: legacycommunityhealth.org

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Kierra Lee
KIELEESTYLE@GMAIL.COM
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ICE halts most vehicle stops following deadly shootings, sources say

▶ Watch Video: Federal officials suspend most vehicle stops during ICE operations after deadly shootings U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have been instructed to immediately suspend most vehicle stops during enforcement operations nationwide, except in cases involving serious criminal targets, following fatal shootings in Texas and Maine over the last week, multiple law enforcement sources told CBS News Tuesday morning.The directive applies to ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations, the division responsible for civil immigration arrests and removals, but not Homeland Security Investigations, which primarily handles criminal investigations, according to sources. It is a temporary pause while Enforcement and Removal Operations officers receive additional training on vehicle-stop tactics, the sources said."It's not a policy change. It's a temporary pause," Trump administration border czar Tom Homan said later in the day on Fox News.Homan said ICE leadership and DHS "want to look at these last couple of incidents. And look, is there something that could have been done better?" He added, "I'm confident that ICE is well trained in vehicle stops and you're going to see us keep moving forward."In the meantime, ERO officers can still participate in operations involving vehicle stops when working with partner law enforcement agencies targeting criminal suspects who are the subject of judicial warrants, sources said.The shift could have significant operational impacts. Vehicle stops have been a common tactic in ICE enforcement operations under the Trump administration, allowing officers to identify, follow and arrest targeted individuals away from homes or workplaces.In the most recent incident, Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero, 25, a Colombian national who was in the country illegally, was shot when he "attempted to flee the scene" Monday when ICE tried to stop him at around 7 a.m. ET in Biddeford, Maine, according to the Department of Homeland Security. "Fearing for public safety, an officer discharged his weapon," DHS said in a statement.While Durán Guerrero was not the target of an operation, ICE agents attempted to pull over the man's car while "conducting targeted surveillance on the last known address of an illegal alien with a final order of removal," DHS said.Durán Guerrero's father, Omar Duran, told CBS News partner Noticias Caracol that his son leaves behind a wife and 3-year-old daughter, adding, he "left the country to build a future for his family.""I only ask God ... that this be resolved in the best way, and that there be justice," Duran said, translated from Spanish. Durán Guerrero had previously been given an order to leave the country, independent Maine Sen. Angus King said Monday. Speaking to CBS News on Tuesday, King called for an independent investigation."I want a full, fair, open, transparent investigation of this, not strictly run by the feds," said King, an independent who caucuses with Democrats. "Unfortunately, the feds don't have the credibility today. The people of Maine are not going to accept an investigation that's run by ICE or at the FBI."A woman places flowers at a makeshift memorial for a man that was fatally shot by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, on July 14, 2026 in Biddeford, Maine. Ryan Murphy/Getty Images
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