Published Feb 10, 2016
smileitout
6 Posts
Good afternoon all,
I am a Certified Medical Assistant who is currently being working as the school nurse at a charter school for 6th-12th grade. I just started this position a few months ago. The previous 'School nurse' was not at all experienced in the medical field and I feel a bit overwhelmed at times because I do not have prior training in this area. I was thrown to the lions. The kids are thankfully well behaved but it can still be frustrating some times. I would appreciate any pointers or tips on anything really.
Thank you and have a wonderful evening!
Farawyn
12,646 Posts
Do you have an RN overseeing you?
nortonplusRN
62 Posts
Good afternoon all,I am a Certified Medical Assistant who is currently being working as the school nurse at a charter school for 6th-12th grade. I just started this position a few months ago. The previous 'School nurse' was not at all experienced in the medical field and I feel a bit overwhelmed at times because I do not have prior training in this area. I was thrown to the lions. The kids are thankfully well behaved but it can still be frustrating some times. I would appreciate any pointers or tips on anything really. Thank you and have a wonderful evening!
You are not a nurse. How can they call you a "school nurse"? I believe it is against the law to call yourself a nurse when you don't hold either an LPN or RN license.
The districts rn who is in charge is 6 hours away.
My title is medical assistant. That is what I call myself when presenting myself to parents or when I speak to someone in regards to my positiong. We don't have a school nurse though. It's only me at the campus
JustBeachyNurse, LPN
13,957 Posts
Check with your state dept of education and board of medical examiners. MA's absolutely cannot practice independently. And in some states a licensed healthcare professional must be on site not 6hrs away. you may be working way out of your scope
peacockblue
293 Posts
Sounds sketchy. Do you give meds? Procedures? I would be careful.
I have spoken to the state health services department. It is not required to have a nurse at every campus in my state. Having a medical assistant is legal.
lifelearningrn, BSN, RN
2,622 Posts
In many, many states any layperson can be trained (or checked off) to administer medications (including insulin) as well as do many procedures (just like a parent is trained). This is the case in Texas, sadly.
Just be care the staff/students/parents don't call you the 'nurse'. Don't open the door for that misunderstanding! Many principles will hire a clerk or MA, stick them in the clinic and allow parents to believe there is a licensed nurse on staff (to save money). It's illegal to misrepresent yourself, and make it a priority to not allow anyone on staff to call you the school 'nurse'. They will do it without even realizing it and as innocent as it is it can cause a legal mess for the school if even one parent thinks there is a nurse on campus and finds out through a bad accident/incident that isn't the case.
Any medication given to children has to be accompanied by a lengthy amount of forms from physicians and parents. I do not preform procedures.
I'm in Pennsylvania where that would be illegal. I keep forgetting I'm talking to folks from all overí ½í¸œ
Not legal in my state.
MAs cannot legally assist with medication administration without a licensed medical professional on site.