Transcript Slide 1

Taking Type 1
to School
Joe and Tom Taking Type 1 to
School
Why are you here?
Child about to start at
nursery/school?
Problems with care for your kids?
Great experience to share?
Managing Medicines in School
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•
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‘There is no legal duty that requires
school or setting staff to administer
medicines. A number of schools are
developing roles for support staff that
build the administration of medicines
into their core job description. Some
support staff may have such a role in
their contract of employment. Schools
should ensure that they have sufficient
members of support staff who are
appropriately trained to manage
medicines as part of their duties.’
Teachers’ conditions of employment do
not include giving or supervising a pupil
taking medicines. Schools should
ensure that they have sufficient
members of support staff who are
employed and appropriately trained to
manage medicines as part of their
duties.
Any member of staff who agrees to
accept responsibility for administering
prescribed medicines to a child should
have appropriate training and guidance.
Why problems since 2005?
• Legal duty missing
• Will to support missing
• Cost employing support staff
• Clinics supporting older regimes
“PCTs, Local Authorities
and school governing bodies should
work in cooperation to determine need,
plan and co-ordinate effective local
provision within the resources
available.”
Effective Local Provision
Agreed LA & PCT Protocols
Nottingham
Essex
Leeds
Oxford
Leicester
Lambeth
•Essex
Protocol
‘In some cases the Local Authority seek reimbursement from
Health Authorities for children and young people that require
complex medical intervention. To apply for reimbursement the
Local Authority requires schools to provide a detailed health
care plan for the pupil outlining the frequency of interventions
and length of time the interventions take. To apply for funding
for managing a pupil’s diabetes Nottinghamshire County
Schools should contact…’
‘Many schools are ensuring that support staff have specific
duties to provide medical assistance as part of their contract.
Support staff with medical experience can be a valuable
addition to any school, benefiting both disabled and nondisabled pupils.’
Nottinghamshire Policy
The RCN is aware of inequality in the
care provision for children and young
people with diabetes in schools and early
years settings.
•Available as PDF
on line at Royal
College of Nursing
website.
School
Approach
Train
Monitor
Who will be involved?
Who will be your school
contact?
Before Induction Day
What do you expect
from them?
How do parents/child feed
back to you and you to them?
Before School Start
What will the care
plan look like?
What process do you follow
to change things?
How will this translate into
normal school day?
When will you formally
review the care plan?
Choosing School
What about the out of
the ordinary?
“There is a difference between admitting and supporting a
pupil in a planned manner via the usual transition from the
previous school/nursery and a casual admission at some
point in the year when support staff are already allocated whichever scenario we would not recover additional funds
to appoint staff to this role.”
Headteacher 2011
Who should be involved?
DSN, Head teacher, School nurse,
child, Head of Year, SENCO/INCO,
Parents, Class teachers, Teaching
assistants, First Aiders, PE teachers,
School Office staff, Old Uncle Tom
Cobbley and all…
What do you expect?
•Unless you have a picture of what good care
looks like it can be very hard to help a school
understand what you believe should be in place
for your child
•For younger children, show them what a typical
day is like for your child; make a picture diary
•Talk to older children about how care has been
and how they would like it to be
•Be realistic
You are the Teacher
•Do not assume everyone understands just
because they nod.
•Prepare your lesson before hand as a teacher
would.
•If not comfortable ask DSN but make sure you
agree on the care before hand.
•Do not ask for help at the start, just explain and
demonstrate.
‘Injection’ conjures different
images
Blood test?
Higher Education and Type 1
•Harder to control: hormonal changes of puberty
and emotional roller-coaster of adolescence
•Higher rates of Diabetic emergencies and risk of
death
•Yet the time when young people are often
expected to ‘take ownership’ of their medical
condition and parents discouraged from
participating
What does a Care Plan Include?
Pump/
Injection
protocols
BG
Tests
PE
Rules
Travel to
school
Illness
Hypo
Protocols
CARE
PLAN
School
Trip
Exam
Protocol
Hyper
Protocols
Emergency
Contact
Numbers
Food
Protocols
•Try to adjust to their
need
•May not be ideal but
makes them feel more
confident
•Schools like clear
instruction
•Start as you need to
go on with tests and
exams
•Do not wait for
GCSEs
•Help teachers to see
association between
school work and BG
levels
The Normal School Day!
• Talk to the school about how the Care Plan
will translate into every day routine
• Use it to follow a pretend day on the timetable
– do you have problem areas?
• Look at where people need to be – is it
physically possible? Can technology help?
• In Secondary school might you make a more
‘User Friendly’ copy?
• Don’t set child or school up for failure - look
for issues that may arise before they happen it is hard to come back from.
Feelings of school staff
Huge responsibility
Fear of making
A mistake
Lack of knowledge
Anxiety
Pressure
Therefore they need support, education and
training – and this will prevent these feelings
taking over!
from Bill Lamb
Any questions?
Sharing solutions