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Bette Carr, MSN, RN, NCSN School Nursing and Health Services Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

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Presentation on theme: "Bette Carr, MSN, RN, NCSN School Nursing and Health Services Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bette Carr, MSN, RN, NCSN School Nursing and Health Services Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction

2  The speaker has no disclosures or conflicts of interest.

3  Participants will be able to identify potential barriers, as well as resources, for implementation of seizure procedures.

4 What do you feel was the biggest barrier this past year in providing appropriate health services to students with seizures or epilepsy?

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6 Prohibits discrimination based solely on a disability No financial assistance All individuals with a disability Reasonable accommodations Provides for special education and related services Provides financial assistance Infants, toddlers, youth with disabilities Evaluation and specially designed instruction Prohibits discrimination based on a disability No financial assistance Person with a disability substantially limiting one or more major life activities Education comparable to that provided to students without disabilities ADA IDEA Section 504

7 Scope of Practice Student’s Health Care Needs

8  Lack of certainty on: ◦ What seizures look like for this child ◦ Medications, doses, routes, and side effects ◦ Timeliness of EMS services ◦ Whether I have the knowledge to train others ◦ Delegating seizure monitoring and medication administration to others

9  Professional development that includes research-based information  Network with other school nurses  Refresh your assessment skills  Spend time with the student and family  Preparation of seizure curriculum for others  Preparation of individualized health care plans for students

10  Communicate with the health care provider (HCP) any concerns that you might have regarding the student or plans  Use resources that you have available to you: ◦ Medical advisor ◦ Webcast training ◦ Other districts or nurses in your area ◦ Epilepsy Foundation ◦ WASN/NASN

11  Health care provider requests: ◦ Orders that are outside your comfort zone ◦ Non-FDA-approved medication routes  Parents request: ◦ That 911 not be called ◦ That the child remain in school after emergency medication has been given ◦ That they will not sign a release of information

12  Plan ahead! o Request a meeting and develop a care plan o Encourage the health care provider to be part of the planning o Involve your medical advisor if needed o Encourage the family to sign a release and explain that the release can be very specific to the seizure disorder care

13  Plan ahead! o Let the family and health care provider know that the school wants to be prepared to provide the safest care possible for their child o Is a 504 Plan needed? o Involve your supervisor or director if needed

14  Leadership skills  Preparation of a curriculum and protocol  Preparing an individualized care plan  Deciding who to train-developing a team of responders  Obtaining time to train  Documenting those who have been trained  Periodically reviewing the plan

15  Curriculum: ◦ Recognize when urgent care is needed ◦ How to access that care ◦ How to handle an emergency ◦ Know how to respond to the child ◦ CPR, seizure recognition  NASN program  Epilepsy Foundation information

16  Protocols from other districts  Protocols from health care providers  Discussing specific situations with your medical advisor  WI Department of Public Instruction website  WISHeS website

17  Protection of the student’s privacy  Health information sharing  Classroom or school setting event management  Prevention of bullying

18  Be prepared and share a plan with the teachers on how to provide for a student’s privacy during a seizure:  If allowed by the family, discuss the child’s condition with the class ahead of time and let the students know what is expected of them  Remove the other students from the area  If giving rectal medications have a packet made up with a sheet or other physical barrier for privacy  Use other adults as a barrier if needed

19  Concern for child’s safety  Fear of doing something wrong  Recognizing postictal somnolence vs. medication sedation  Sufficiently trained staff  EMS services readily available

20  Planning and reviewing  Practice plan  Check with local health care provider for changes in care plan  Have parents video record what the child’s postictal and post-medication behavior looks like

21 2006 Healthy Learner Model: Special School District #1, Minneapolis Public Schools Related Services

22  Mary  Marc

23  Student: Wyatt, 13-year-old  Health condition: epilepsy, tonic-clonic seizures  Treatment: taking Valproic Acid 15ml b.i.d.  Emergency medication: Diazepam 10 mg rectal gel  Order states: ◦ Administer Diazepam 10mg rectally for seizures lasting greater than 2 minutes, call parent, and stay with student until the parent arrives to pick up the child.

24  Questions: ◦ What do Wyatt’s seizures look like? ◦ Has Wyatt ever received emergency medication?  What was his reaction to the medication?  Is he fearful of getting it at school in front of his peers? ◦ Is the nurse in the building and available to assess? ◦ Is the Unlicensed Assistive Personnel (UAP) capable of monitoring the student? ◦ How long will it take for the parent to arrive? ◦ How long will it take for EMS services to arrive if there are problems?

25  Resolution: ◦ Draft a care plan that takes into account the answers to the questions ◦ Have parent sign release and communicate with the HCP ◦ Train the staff that work with the student ◦ Prepare an emergency kit that includes all necessary items and a barrier ◦ Make decisions on whether care can safely be given without EMS services being called

26  Student: Anna, 5-year-old  Health condition: autism, complex-partial seizures  Med at school: taking Carbamazepine 100mg 2 chewable tablets at noon  Emergency medication: Midazolam 1ml intranasal MAD (mucosal atomization device)  Order states: ◦ Administer Midazolam 0.5ml in each nostril for seizures greater than 5 minutes or for 3 or more seizures in 24 hrs lasting less than 5 minutes. Call 911after use.

27  Questions: ◦ What do Anna’s seizures look like? ◦ Has Anna ever received emergency medication?  What was her reaction to the medication? ◦ Is the nurse in the building and available to assess the seizures? ◦ Is the Unlicensed Assistive Personnel (UAP) capable of monitoring the student’s repeated seizures? ◦ How long will it take for EMS services to arrive once called?

28  Resolution ◦ Draft a care plan that takes into account the answers to the questions ◦ Have parent sign a release and communicate with the HCP ◦ Train the staff that work with the student in recognizing seizures and in timing of the seizures

29  Perceived barriers: ◦ School nurse knowledge and confidence ◦ Difficult requests ◦ Training of others ◦ Privacy ◦ Safety  Overcoming these barriers: ◦ Increase knowledge and skills which increases confidence ◦ Improve communication between student-family- health care provider-school nurse-staff

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