Oh How I Miss School Nurses

School nurses are becoming a thing of the past in many schools across the country. With this being one of the top reasons teachers marched on our state's capital last week, I felt compelled to write about how very very important school nurses are to our community. Nurses Announcements Archive

Published

I have wanted to write this article for some time and was pulled back to it after a statewide march at our capital for teachers and school advocacy. One of the major points focused on our lack of school nurses. In the southeastern state that I live in, each school system works with their nurses differently. The county I live in has ONE school nurse shared between THREE schools. I am gonna let you think on that for a bit and revisit this point again later......

As a "sickly little asthmatic kid" in the early 80's, my school nurses and I were best buds. At that time, school nurses did physicals, hearing and vision screens, lice checks, gave medications, nebulizer treatments, assess for fever, broken bones, bandage wounds and teach classes on healthy habits, puberty, cleanliness, and how babies are made (more importantly, how NOT to make babies). They kept our shot records and medical history in a tidy file cabinet in her office. In my school, she even had a shower for the kids who, for whatever the reason, needed one. The school nurse was an invaluable part of the team/ community that helped raise and mold us as kids.

Fast forward to my current stage of life as a mom of 3 children in public school as well as a nurse by trade (and spirit). My wonderful sickly asthmatic traits were passed on to our oldest son, whom I also should mention is our most accident prone of the three. No joke, he will manage to trip and fall in the middle of an open field. Oh how I worried myself sick sending him off to school when kindergarten came around. Who was going to watch over him like I do? Who was going to know when he was having an asthma attack starting so it could be controlled before getting to bad. He is also anaphylactic to peanuts.....what more can I say. You get the idea. As a parent you have to trust that your child will be cared for by teachers, administrators, school nurses and support staff during the 8 hours 5 days a week that they are not under our watch.

True story here....The very first day of school for our oldest and I am at the gym exercising my worries away when I get a call from the school. Instant panic.....it's his teacher. "I just wanted to let you know that your son walked into a wall and has a pretty big goose egg." I wasn't joking...he is a genius with absolutely no sense of personal surroundings. So of course I asked if he was ok and she said that she thought so but that his head hurt. I asked if the school nurse looked at. That was when I found out that "our school only has a nurse one day a week and she is primarily responsible for keeping up with the kids medication records, shot records, physicals etc, not really working with the kids". WHAT??? So who decides when my son needs the Epipen and who gives it? Teacher. The school nurse educates the teacher when a student is in their class that has chronic needs. Ummmmm.....this did/does not sit well with me.

So, I have my 4 year degree in nursing with some extra certifications and 20 years of experience as well as being a mom to these children for the past 12 years and I will say, that many many times, I am not sure what to do with childhood illness and issues. (I am not a peds nurse as you can tell). The burden of making judgement calls regarding health and physical welfare of our kids is now in the hands of the teacher. It should not be. They are teachers...educated on educating, not nursing. They already have waaay to much stacked against them in the classroom with class size, lack of supplies and funding etc, and now we ask them to care for the fragile type 1 diabetic child with an insulin pump that needs adjusting numerous times per day??! NOT OK.

Funding has been cut drastically in many states for school nurses. We as health professionals and parents need to speak up. I know of times in our school system where, a child's heart stopped on the playground due to a congenital abnormality that no one knew about. I have been at the schools during episodes of new onset seizures, heat stroke, broken bones, teachers with severe hypoglycemia etc. We need our school nurses back. Each school needs a nurse on site everyday. The kids, teachers and parents all deserve this. The health and safety of our kids should not be a, "we just don't have the money in the budget for school nurses" option. Many children lack quality healthcare, food, and sometimes unhealthy and unsafe living conditions. The school nurse helps to fill in the gaps for these kids. He/she is the child's advocate, the eyes and ears for parents who send their kids to school. He/she keeps important record of illness and accidents, and at times abuse situations. This information may be the proof needed to remove a child from an unsafe environment. They may help the physician with diagnosing, mental and physical health diseases based on patterns noted during the day. He/she can assess when my breath holding child passes out during his math test and figure out whether further care is needed...if there was a seizure, hypoglycemia, hyperthermia after a hot day on the playground, dehydration...or just his normal anxiety during a test.

I just want to say that I can not advocate or speak enough about how important school nurses are to our community. They are such an integral part of raising our next generation. Our children, teachers, parents, and schools deserve to have ONE school nurse per school. To have actual hands on care not only with the children within the school but the visitors, staff and parents when needed. School nurses are perhaps the foundation for community health and with all that is going on our ever changing world.....this foundation needs to be a solid and strong one!

I would love to hear how you communities and states manage the cuts in funding for school nurses. How has your school worked with this??

Specializes in Med/Surg, Emergency Room, School Nurse.

I have recently became a school nurse, and I hadn't realized that some schools don't have a nurse just a health coordinator who took a class on how to give medication. The school I now work at had not had a nurse on their staff for over 10 years from my understanding.

This year I have sent students out for broken bones, concussions, caught an appendicitis... that is just some of the things that has happened since I have been here. I don't have any special needs students here or any that take medication on a regular basis here at the school, but I have a plethora of students with multiple allergies some that carry epi pens on themselves and have back ups in the clinic (knock on wood never had to use any. We have teachers with medical problems one of which I have nitro for in my cabinet.

Before I came on I was told that students would come down to take naps just to get out of class, if a student just said they didn't feel good they were sent home. Since I have started attendance has been better, no more sleeping students in the clinic unless they are sick after all this is a private school and they are actually paying for their education at least their parents are.

Sorry for Rambling... my point was that I can't image a school without having a full time nurse on board. Whether it be a LPN, RN, BSN, MSN... someone trained with medical knowledge is better than someone with out or no one at all!

Specializes in CPN.

After two years working as a school nurse in a middle school, I know how valuable this role is. I just wish my school (and others) felt the same way! I've responded to a couple LOCs, managed a multitude of asthma attacks, administered epinephrine to a new onset food allergy anaphylaxis case (I had fought to get Epipens in our schools for such cases just the previous year), treated lacerations that had teachers running to call 911 (not necessary), called 911 (after I couldn't get a hold of parents for awhile) for a student with back pain and an ICE COLD right arm (was reprimanded for this because the principal thought it was unnecessary), taken care of students with panic attacks, T1D with glucose of 23, a different T1D with glucose over 500 with nausea, and even found out about and reported on blatant grooming for a possible human trafficking situation. I have worked with the local county health department to track outbreaks of flu-like illnesses. I have spent hours educating students on how to take care of themselves when they are sick. I've taught poor teen girls that cramps that make them vomit and cry aren't "normal" and that doctors can help treat that. I have fought for students to be able to maintain their rights within the classroom. I have dealt with cases of medical neglect that the principal would have brushed off. And I have tried with all my might to teach those around me that preventing emergencies is a better alternative to "just call 911."

School nurses are SO much more than bandaids and ice packs. When given the autonomy, support, and resources, we can make a huge difference in the lives of children and their education, and set them up on a lifetime of better health awareness.

In other words, THANK YOU, for seeing the value in our position!

I currently work to place nurses in the schools for both the 1:1 cases as well as the "school nurse" role, which I call a district nurse since they are usually placed at 2-3 schools, not just one. Having VN's/PN's in the schools to help in the health office seems to be beneficial when the RN's are limited. However, they are limited to working in the health office under the supervision of the RN. When I was a school nurse, I had two schools that I worked between. I did have the opportunity to do some teaching regarding some health concerns, including hand washing and growth & development through teen years. However, this time was always limited due to the other duties. By limiting the time of the nurse in the school system, the exposure to nursing (real nursing) at an early age is being limited. I remember my first exposure to nursing was my school nurse who came into the classroom (at least annually) for teaching on health issues. She was one who inspired me to be a nurse. Now the school nurses' time seems to be limited to completing assessments to meet the standard requirements and for IEP/504 needs. The health clerk or LVN/LPN is often the one dealing with the day to day needs of the students.

+ Add a Comment