....the forms for the school were filled out freshman year and they are seniors, does the school not send them home at the beginning of each year to be updated? Just asking because that is a major form which must be updated at our school within the first week of the new year.
The OP has stated that they had filled senior forms out, but the nurse went back to the frosh forms.
You know, regardless of ambulance being called for being "out" for maybe 30 seconds, this whole school thing just sounds unsafe and rather stupid to me.
You guys are listed first. You have a home and cell numbers. They should call ALL of them, leaving messages. Being out of town doesn't mean you're in Upper Mongolia. You can be reached. This isn't the early 80s before cellphones were all over and for the uber-wealthy. They should have called each of your numbers before calling any other numbers on that form.
Only after calling those numbers, then they move on to the next on the list. The proper list. Not the old list.
If a 17 year old doesn't have the right to say no to medical treatment (how on earth would I have done anything since I was all the way across the country when I was 17 and went off to college????), then a 17 year old twin shouldn't be given the responsibility to contact parents. So IF the nurse was indeed expecting that her comedy of errors of using old forms to contact people meant that the twin would be contacting you, then that's wrong too.
And all of that has nothing to do with the nurse deciding to call 911 when they'd never done that before.
I mean, the girl passed out in class. For maybe 30 seconds. The teacher verified this. So the teacher calls? sends the girl to? the nurse. The nurse calls the OP's sister then has what, to me, the school cynic, seems like a strong case of CYA-itis, and calls 911.
Sounds like there are other issues in the OP's daughter's health, but it doesn't seem like the school knows about them, so IMO it's just odd that 911 was called, since no one seems to be saying that she worsened after (I assume) she got ot the nurse's office.
So I'm not saying that there was no good reason in the end for the ambulance ride...but the logic behind the call just isn't there, and the protocol was absolutely BOTCHED.
And the final thing will be, if the OP's city is like mine, the big fat bill from the ambulance company. And the OP wasn't even there to snag the blanket that they probably covered her with and would throw away, like I did, when we had our $700* ambulance ride for DS. Best, most expensive, blanket ever!
*to be honest insurance covered most of it. but the ambulance company was THE WORST to deal with. billed insurance first (before insurance saw there was a bonafide reason for the transport), billed US last. offered a discount, then took it back, and we spent the next 6 months or so getting collections letters while the reps from rural/metro tried to find the records to see why the discount was offered and why it was rescinded then would go on vacation and lock up their files so no one else could see them...oh it was just cruddy. It's really too bad my area charges for ambulance rides...because I really really really hate rural/metro ambulance company.