


July in Hershey means heat, humidity, and the hum of back-to-school preparation. Backpacks are on sale. Supply lists are circulating. And somewhere in the shuffle, a lot of families realize they need to schedule a physical — fast.
Whether your child is starting kindergarten in Hummelstown, entering sixth grade in Palmyra, or gearing up for fall sports in Harrisburg, a physical exam is more than a piece of paper for the school nurse. Done right, it gives you a complete snapshot of your child's health, catches things that haven't come up yet, and sets them up for a strong school year.
Here is what every Central Pennsylvania family should know before they call to book that appointment.
These two exams are closely related, but they are not the same thing.
A school physical — also called a well-child visit — is a comprehensive preventive health exam. It covers your child's growth, development, vision, hearing, immunizations, and overall physical and emotional well-being. Think of it as a full check-in on every system in your child's body.
A sports physical (the formal name is a Preparticipation Physical Evaluation, or PPE) is a more targeted exam that determines whether your child can safely compete in athletics. According to guidelines published by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the PPE focuses especially on the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems — the two areas most directly tied to athletic safety.
The good news is that the two can often be done in the same appointment. The AAP specifically recommends that the sports physical be conducted in your child's primary care physician's office — the same place where your child gets immunizations and ongoing care. Combining the visits means your doctor has a fuller picture of your child's health, your child doesn't have to make two trips, and all records stay in one place.
Pennsylvania is specific about when children need a physical on file with their school. Under Section 1402 of the Pennsylvania Public School Code, every student must have a comprehensive physical examination at three points in their school career:
Private physicals completed by your family physician are accepted. The exam must have been done within one year before the start of the school year in which it is required. That means if your child is heading into sixth grade this fall, a physical completed any time after July 1st of last school year will meet the state requirement.
For sports participation, requirements vary by school and district. Most Pennsylvania high school athletic programs — governed by the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) — require a sports physical form before a student can participate in any team sport. Check with your child's athletic director or school nurse for the exact form needed and the submission deadline.
The AAP recommends scheduling the sports physical at least six weeks before the first preseason practice. For most fall sports in Central PA, preseason starts in mid-to-late August. That means families scheduling in early July are right on time — and those waiting until late August may find themselves scrambling.
Youth sports are a major part of life in Central Pennsylvania. Nationally, 58% of children ages 6–17 participated in organized sports in 2024, according to the National Survey of Children's Health — nearly back to pre-pandemic levels and trending upward.
With so many young athletes active, keeping them safe matters. The PPE was designed specifically for that purpose. According to the joint guidelines published by the AAP, AAFP, American College of Sports Medicine, and three other major medical organizations (published as PPE5, the fifth edition), the core goals of a sports physical are:
One important thing to understand: the sports physical is not a guarantee against injury. What it does provide is a meaningful, structured safety screen — particularly for cardiac risk, which is one of the primary concerns in young athletes. The PPE includes a detailed family and personal history review that asks specifically about heart-related symptoms such as fainting during exercise, chest pain with exertion, and unexplained shortness of breath.
The PPE5 guidelines also added a formal mental health component — recognizing that emotional well-being is just as essential to athletic safety as physical readiness.
If you have never brought a child or teenager to a combined well-child and sports physical, here is a realistic picture of what to expect.
At a well-child exam, your provider will typically:
For the sports physical portion, additional focus goes to:
At the end of the visit, your provider completes the required clearance form indicating whether your child is cleared for all sports, cleared with specific limitations, or in need of further evaluation before participating.
Most children clear their physical without any issues. But there are situations where a heads-up to your provider beforehand — or at the start of the appointment — makes a real difference.
Let your doctor know if:
You do not need a diagnosis to mention these things. Simply raising them gives your provider the information needed to do the exam thoroughly and follow up appropriately.
A little preparation makes the visit go more smoothly for everyone.
Before you arrive:
On the day of the appointment:
After the visit:
At Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center in Hershey, PA, Dr. Danette J. Joseph, MD — a board-certified family medicine physician with more than ten years of experience caring for Central Pennsylvania families — sees children and adults across every stage of life. That continuity is one of the things that makes primary care different from a walk-in clinic or a school nurse station.
When your child comes in for a school or sports physical at Three Angels, it is not just a checkbox. It is an opportunity to look at the whole child — physical health, emotional well-being, growth trajectory, and how they are showing up in the world. Dr. Joseph takes time to talk with kids and teens, not just about them.
The practice welcomes patients for:
Families come to Three Angels from Hershey, Palmyra, Hummelstown, Elizabethtown, Middletown, Campbelltown, Harrisburg, and throughout Dauphin County. If your child does not have a regular doctor yet, or if you've been meaning to schedule that overdue physical, summer is the right time to get it done.
If you'd like to schedule a school physical, sports physical, or well-child exam for your child, Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center in Hershey, PA is welcoming new patients. We also serve families in Palmyra, Hummelstown, Elizabethtown, and Middletown.
Request an appointment online or call (717) 298-1268.
Medical disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with questions about a medical condition or before starting, stopping, or changing any treatment. Reading this article does not create a physician-patient relationship with Dr. Danette J. Joseph, MD or Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center.

July in Hershey means heat, humidity, and the hum of back-to-school preparation. Backpacks are on sale. Supply lists are circulating. And somewhere in the shuffle, a lot of families realize they need to schedule a physical — fast.
Whether your child is starting kindergarten in Hummelstown, entering sixth grade in Palmyra, or gearing up for fall sports in Harrisburg, a physical exam is more than a piece of paper for the school nurse. Done right, it gives you a complete snapshot of your child's health, catches things that haven't come up yet, and sets them up for a strong school year.
Here is what every Central Pennsylvania family should know before they call to book that appointment.
These two exams are closely related, but they are not the same thing.
A school physical — also called a well-child visit — is a comprehensive preventive health exam. It covers your child's growth, development, vision, hearing, immunizations, and overall physical and emotional well-being. Think of it as a full check-in on every system in your child's body.
A sports physical (the formal name is a Preparticipation Physical Evaluation, or PPE) is a more targeted exam that determines whether your child can safely compete in athletics. According to guidelines published by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the PPE focuses especially on the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems — the two areas most directly tied to athletic safety.
The good news is that the two can often be done in the same appointment. The AAP specifically recommends that the sports physical be conducted in your child's primary care physician's office — the same place where your child gets immunizations and ongoing care. Combining the visits means your doctor has a fuller picture of your child's health, your child doesn't have to make two trips, and all records stay in one place.
Pennsylvania is specific about when children need a physical on file with their school. Under Section 1402 of the Pennsylvania Public School Code, every student must have a comprehensive physical examination at three points in their school career:
Private physicals completed by your family physician are accepted. The exam must have been done within one year before the start of the school year in which it is required. That means if your child is heading into sixth grade this fall, a physical completed any time after July 1st of last school year will meet the state requirement.
For sports participation, requirements vary by school and district. Most Pennsylvania high school athletic programs — governed by the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) — require a sports physical form before a student can participate in any team sport. Check with your child's athletic director or school nurse for the exact form needed and the submission deadline.
The AAP recommends scheduling the sports physical at least six weeks before the first preseason practice. For most fall sports in Central PA, preseason starts in mid-to-late August. That means families scheduling in early July are right on time — and those waiting until late August may find themselves scrambling.
Youth sports are a major part of life in Central Pennsylvania. Nationally, 58% of children ages 6–17 participated in organized sports in 2024, according to the National Survey of Children's Health — nearly back to pre-pandemic levels and trending upward.
With so many young athletes active, keeping them safe matters. The PPE was designed specifically for that purpose. According to the joint guidelines published by the AAP, AAFP, American College of Sports Medicine, and three other major medical organizations (published as PPE5, the fifth edition), the core goals of a sports physical are:
One important thing to understand: the sports physical is not a guarantee against injury. What it does provide is a meaningful, structured safety screen — particularly for cardiac risk, which is one of the primary concerns in young athletes. The PPE includes a detailed family and personal history review that asks specifically about heart-related symptoms such as fainting during exercise, chest pain with exertion, and unexplained shortness of breath.
The PPE5 guidelines also added a formal mental health component — recognizing that emotional well-being is just as essential to athletic safety as physical readiness.
If you have never brought a child or teenager to a combined well-child and sports physical, here is a realistic picture of what to expect.
At a well-child exam, your provider will typically:
For the sports physical portion, additional focus goes to:
At the end of the visit, your provider completes the required clearance form indicating whether your child is cleared for all sports, cleared with specific limitations, or in need of further evaluation before participating.
Most children clear their physical without any issues. But there are situations where a heads-up to your provider beforehand — or at the start of the appointment — makes a real difference.
Let your doctor know if:
You do not need a diagnosis to mention these things. Simply raising them gives your provider the information needed to do the exam thoroughly and follow up appropriately.
A little preparation makes the visit go more smoothly for everyone.
Before you arrive:
On the day of the appointment:
After the visit:
At Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center in Hershey, PA, Dr. Danette J. Joseph, MD — a board-certified family medicine physician with more than ten years of experience caring for Central Pennsylvania families — sees children and adults across every stage of life. That continuity is one of the things that makes primary care different from a walk-in clinic or a school nurse station.
When your child comes in for a school or sports physical at Three Angels, it is not just a checkbox. It is an opportunity to look at the whole child — physical health, emotional well-being, growth trajectory, and how they are showing up in the world. Dr. Joseph takes time to talk with kids and teens, not just about them.
The practice welcomes patients for:
Families come to Three Angels from Hershey, Palmyra, Hummelstown, Elizabethtown, Middletown, Campbelltown, Harrisburg, and throughout Dauphin County. If your child does not have a regular doctor yet, or if you've been meaning to schedule that overdue physical, summer is the right time to get it done.
If you'd like to schedule a school physical, sports physical, or well-child exam for your child, Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center in Hershey, PA is welcoming new patients. We also serve families in Palmyra, Hummelstown, Elizabethtown, and Middletown.
Request an appointment online or call (717) 298-1268.
Medical disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with questions about a medical condition or before starting, stopping, or changing any treatment. Reading this article does not create a physician-patient relationship with Dr. Danette J. Joseph, MD or Three Angels Family Practice & Wellness Center.
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