Okay, I have to weigh in on this one. I *am* a school nurse. The state of Georgia mandated nurses in public schools about 5 years ago; our salaries are paid through a state grant. It is shocking to me when I hear the secretaries talk about how they used to run the school clinic--with all the inhalers, meds, injuries, illnesses it's a huge responsibility to take on!
I work in a middle school which has about 900 students and 140 staff. Do you know how many kids I evaluated last year?? 9,716. That's right--over 9 THOUSAND CLINIC VISITS. For one nurse, in one year. That's a lot of sick kids.This time of year I see about 40 kids a day, but in the spring when the pollen blooms that number can skyrocket to 80 or even 100 kids per day.
Today I took care of a student who passed out during the mile-run and I suspect a heart problem; mom is going to take her to the doctor. One girl forgot to take her seizure meds this morning. I had several with asthma, sore throats and vomiting, and a few finger, knee and head injuries. A burn, some bug bites, and a few with "I-hate-math-itis." I taught 17 teachers how to use an Epipen. 20 minutes before closing an administrator wanted a written report of every kid in the school who has some kind of health issue. I was dressed down by another admin in front of another group of 15 teachers over something beyond my control
School nurses elevate the level of education in any school by keeping kids (and staff) healthy. Sick kids can't learn. It costs a lot to keep a good nurse on staff, but it should be a necessary cost of doing business. States need to step up to the plate and fund school nurses.