"A child's learning is the function more of the characteristics of his classmates than those of the teacher." James Coleman, 1972
Showing posts with label school nurses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school nurses. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

School Nurses Need to Be Back on the Job

"The school only has a nurse on staff two days a week. Like many schools around the country, the city’s dire funding situation has hit school nurses especially hard."

At Alternet:

This story is getting some attention it deserves. School nurses need to be back on the job.


Sixth Grader’s Father Says She Wouldn’t Have Died If A School Nurse Had Been On Duty

Budget cuts have left Philadelphia's schools without adequate medical support, and students are paying with their lives.
Photo Credit: itsmejust | Shutterstock.com
 
Laporshia Massey, a 12-year-old girl from Philadelphia, died on September 25 after an asthma attack went untreated at her school. Her father says that she would have lived had there been a school nurse there to treat her — but there wasn’t one, thanks to budget cuts in the Philadelphia school system.
Daniel Burch, Laporshia’s father, took his story to the Philadelphia City Paperthis week. He explained that he got a call from his daughter’s school saying she was having an attack, but he had no idea how serious things were. The school, meanwhile, was telling his daughter to just “ be calm.”
It was only only after Laporshia got home that Burch realize she needed to be rushed to the hospital. He took her in his car and, when she collapsed on the way, he pulled over and flagged an ambulance down in the middle of the street. But it was too late.
“If she had problems throughout the day, why … didn’t [the school] call me sooner?” Burch is left asking, “Why… didn’t [the school] take her to the hospital?”
Burch suspects that no one called him about his daughter’s deteriorating asthma problems because there was no trained professional to identify just how serious they were. He’s right: The school only has a nurse on staff two days a week. Like many schools around the country, the city’s dire funding situation has hit school nurses especially hard.
In fact, one quarter of schools in the United States have no school nurse at all. Philadelphia is one of the cities that knows that too well. Budget cuts brought the total number of school nurses in the city down by 100 (PDF) for the 2011-2012 school year.
That means 900 school nurses are serving 200,000 students in Philadelphia schools. And it’s leading to dangerous situations: An estimated 52 percent of kids report not receiving urgent medical care, while 36 percent are not getting medications or treatments at prescribed intervals. When kids are getting help, it’s not from people who necessarily know what they’re doing. Seventy percent say they’re getting medical care from untrained teachers.

No Money for School Nurses Just Tests

Ill children in schools need nursing care, not more tests, or the common core curriculum. They need common sense and common healthcare. This is how far removed education policy written by  Walmart has gotten us. I suppose they forgot the "humane" standard.

A West Philadelphia sixth grader was sent home and she died. The school district spokesman, talking policy, said "nurses do not administer medical interventions." Do you suppose that's why all the school nurses in poor districts are gone? Do they have the same policy at the charter school down the street?

School District spokesman Fernando Gallard said that if the child had faced a medical emergency at school and said she could not breathe, Bryant officials would have called 911 instead of sending her home to her parents even if a nurse had been at the school.
Nurses "do not administer medical interventions," Gallard said.
He said he could not discuss Massey's health issues, but said the emergency occurred at her home - not at school.

OK, let's see. If a child is sick, a nurse on school premises is not allowed to administer any nursing care, she would have to call 911 first and wait for a medic with an ambulance to arrive. Please select the best solution for this problem:

A. Get a clue
B. When did you have your lobotomy?
C. Are you a member of the Tea Party?
D. Find a new district manager who might have spent a few days with young children.

Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20131011_Report__Ill_girl_at_school_without_nurse_is_sent_home__dies.html#5gX5gf8BTQOJRAiB.99http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20131011_Report__Ill_girl_at_school_without_nurse_is_sent_home__dies.html