School Nursing: Daily Duties
Office Visits
You never know what is going to walk through your office door; I like to call my office a mini clinic.
Anything and everything will come to you.
This will require you to think quickly and utilize those critical thinking skills.
From congestion, broken bones, and seizures, you must be prepared to handle it all.
Daily medications – if you are a large school, chances are your mornings and afternoons will be full of these. These not only include ADHD medications, but seizure medications, antibiotics, allergy medications, and more.
Daily treatments and procedures – all of the children you saw in the hospital that were deemed “medically complex” will more than likely be going to school.
These children have a wide variety of daily treatments.
You may see g-tube feedings, g-tube medications, catheterization, tracheostomy suctioning, diabetic treatments, nebulizers, and many more.
In these circumstances, you get to utilize skills that you learned in the hospital!
More importantly though, this is something that no one else in the school knows how to do, so they will look to you for guidance.
Communication
Communication across all of the channels listed below will come with a career in school nursing. Here are a few examples!
Parents or Guardians
This communication will be daily.
Whether it is in the form of notes sent home with students, phone calls, emails or in person, get used to this.
Since guardians are not present in the school, it is important that any health-related information on their children be communicated with them.
Physicians
I mentioned above you will provide medication and treatments to many students.
You will receive administration instructions from the student’s physician.
As with hospital nursing, you cannot administer medication without the approval of a physician (or parent/guardian in the case of over-the-counter medication).
Treatments will be at the direction of the physician. You need to be aware of your personal scope of practice as a nurse, as well as your school board policy, as there will be some treatments you cannot perform.
Administrators
I mentioned above you will provide medication and treatments to many students.
You will receive administration instructions from the student’s physician.
As with hospital nursing, you cannot administer medication without the approval of a physician (or parent/guardian in the case of over-the-counter medication).
Treatments will be at the direction of the physician. You need to be aware of your personal scope of practice as a nurse, as well as your school board policy, as there will be some treatments you cannot perform.
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