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Ellen
07-15-2008, 07:11 PM
http://newsok.com/okla.-1-of-4-states-with-1-school-nurse-for-every-3000-students/article/3270396?mp=0 (http://newsok.com/okla.-1-of-4-states-with-1-school-nurse-for-every-3000-students/article/3270396?mp=0)

Tue July 15, 2008

Okla. 1 of 4 states with 1 school nurse for every 3,000 students

By Melissa Kossler Dutton
Associated Press Writer
During the past two school years, teacher Julia Keyse (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Julia+Keyse&CATEGORY=PERSON) had to enforce an unusual rule in her kindergarten and first-grade classroom: No interrupting while she pricked Caylee's finger to check her blood sugar and adjusted her insulin pump


"They were so good. They would just sit and wait," Keyse said of her class at Etowah Elementary School (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Etowah+Elementary+School&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION) in Henderson County (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Henderson+County&CATEGORY=COUNTY), N.C.
It's a task Keyse (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Julia+Keyse&CATEGORY=PERSON) never imagined when she became a teacher, but medical duties have become a part of the job for educators across the country as schools cut nursing staff or require nurses to work at multiple locations. The change comes at a time when more students are dealing with serious medical conditions, such as severe allergies, asthma and diabetes.
It's a change that's unsettling for teachers, school nurses and parents. "We don't want to pretend to be doctors or nurses," Keyse said. "I would have gone to school for that."


Federal guidelines recommend that schools employ one nurse for every 750 students, but the national average is one nurse for every 1,151 students, according to Amy Garcia (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Amy+Garcia&CATEGORY=PERSON), executive director of the National Association of School Nurses (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=National+Association+of+School+Nurses&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION). Oklahoma is one of four states that has a ratio of one nurse to every 3,000 students or more.
A quarter of schools in the nation have no school nurse.
Although there is no historical data regarding the number of school nurses nationwide, members of the profession say there are fewer nurses doing more work, while teachers and other school workers pick up the slack. The average nurse splits her time between 2.2 schools, according to the association.
"Teachers deserve a school nurse because their time should be spent teaching," Garcia (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Amy+Garcia&CATEGORY=PERSON) said.
Meanwhile, the workload of school nurses has increased since 1975, when the federal government mandated that schools accommodate disabled students, clearing the way for children with feeding tubes, catheters and other serious medical conditions to attend school. Today, 16 percent of students have a condition that requires regular attention from the school nurse, Garcia (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Amy+Garcia&CATEGORY=PERSON) said.
Many parents and school administers don't realize that nurses are handling life-threatening conditions as well as performing vision, health and diabetes screenings, said Barbara Duddy (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Barbara+Duddy&CATEGORY=PERSON), president of the Tennessee Association of School Nurses (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Tennessee+Association+of+School+Nurses&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION) in Memphis.
"They think the school nurse is nice little job where you take care or boo-boos," she said. "School nurses work very hard to make sure every child gets exactly what they need."
Garcia (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Amy+Garcia&CATEGORY=PERSON) blamed shifting priorities, shrinking budgets and a misunderstanding of the school nurse's role for the loss of jobs.
The Southern Humboldt Unified School Board (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Southern+Humboldt+Unified+School+Board&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION) in Garberville, Calif., blamed a reduction in state funding when members voted in June to eliminate one nursing position and reduce the other position to 10 hours a week for the upcoming school year.
"The nurses provide great services for our students, but so do all the other positions that we've cut," said Susie Jennings (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Susie+Jennings&CATEGORY=PERSON), associate superintendent for the 800-student district.
Robin Correll, the remaining nurse, worries how she will oversee the district's seven schools. She was already struggling to perform annual health and vision screenings.
"It will be impossible to do all the work," she said. "It breaks my heart. Kids deserve better."
Correll, like many nurses around the country, has already trained teachers and secretaries to dispense medication, give shots of adrenaline and help children use inhalers. So far the district has stopped short of asking nonmedical personnel to administer insulin.
The thought of someone without a medical background managing Brandon Merrell (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Brandon+Merrell&CATEGORY=PERSON)'s diabetes makes his mother, Amy Merrell (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Amy+Merrell&CATEGORY=PERSON), very uncomfortable. The Gilbert, Ariz., woman wants assurances that her 8-year-old son will be properly cared for while he's at Coronado Elementary School (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Coronado+Elementary+School&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION).
"There needs to be somebody in there that knows what they're doing," she said.
She and her husband, Doug, are among the parents speaking out about the issue. After they and other parents objected to a plan to cut the number of school nurses from nine to two, the Higley Unified School District (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Higley+Unified+School+District&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION) decided in June to maintain five nursing jobs.
In Keyse's North Carolina district, Barb Molton told county commissioners that she worried her diabetic 13-year-old son, Brice, had access to a school nurse for only two mornings a week.
"It can be scary dropping your child off at school wondering if that will be the day they might have a medical emergency and wondering if that is the day you might be lucky to have a school nurse there," she said at the hearing.
The commissioners agreed to fund two additional nurses for the upcoming school year.
School nurses, who have spent the last decade defending their jobs, are happy to see parents take up the cause, said David Schildmeier (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=David+Schildmeier&CATEGORY=PERSON), spokesman for the Massachusetts Nurses Association (http://newsok.com/keysearch/?er=1&CANONICAL=Massachusetts+Nurses+Association&CATEGORY=ORGANIZATION). "That's how the change happens," he said. "That's how this issue gets solved."

School nurse burdens by state


The National Association of School Nurses calculates the nurse-to-student ratio for each state. Federal guidelines recommend that schools employ one nurse for every 750 students, but the national average is one nurse for every 1,151 students.
States with nursing ratios of 1 to 750 or better:
Arkansas
Delaware
Kansas
Maine
New Hampshire
New Jersey
Rhode Island
Vermont
Wyoming
States with ratios of 1 to 3,000 or more:
Michigan
North Dakota
Oklahoma
Utah
Source: National Association of School Nurses By The Associated Press

Tamara Gamble
07-15-2008, 10:31 PM
Sadly, we don't have many nurses in Michigan schools. One district that I know of has two nurses for 30,000 students. No, this is not a typo. 30,000 students. This is why we need to make sure that our states never allow a nurses can only clause like California, Maryland, etc. If they have them we need to get rid of them.

We have been very successful here in Michigan because we only have federal law governing us. Nothing else on diabetes. Sometimes I think it's better this way. We keep trying to add more and more laws, people find more and more loopholes, so then there are more and more bills. If we just get rid of all of the junk that was implemented for the good of our children I think we would have an easier way to go.

Just my thoughts.

Tami

BrendaK
07-15-2008, 10:38 PM
Although we loved our school in Michigan it sure has been a change to move to Illinois. In Michigan, no school nurse period. At our new school, we have 2 nurses for less than 400 kids. Only one is there at a time, but there is always a nurse at the school 100% of the time.

KelliTwins
07-28-2008, 02:57 PM
That's such a shame. Even though Greg isn't starting kindergarten for a year, it really worries me. I even called our elementary school just to make sure they had a full time nurse on staff, which they do. So many schools are now "sharing nurses". It's such a frightening thought! There are so many kids nowadays on so many different medications...I don't know how they get away with not having nurses on staff full time! :mad: