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The Relentless School Nurse: If We Don’t Ask, the Answer is Always NO!

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School nurses have an unprecedented opportunity to request funds from the American Rescue Plan be allocated for school health services. School districts across the country are tasked with submitting plans for this influx of federal dollars to their state Departments of Education (DOE). The timeline is tight, but it is not too late to submit your recommendations. If we don’t ask, the answer is always no…

We can also take this important moment to promote The Future of Nursing Report and how investing in school nursing democratizes access to care for students who have been underserved. 

Future of Nursing 2020-2030:-is an expert committee supported through the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation partnered with the Institute of Medicine. The committee’s recently released report will extend the vision for the nursing profession into 2030 and it will chart a path for the nursing profession to help our nation create a culture of health, reduce health disparities, and improve the health and wellbeing of the U.S. population in the 21st century.” 

  • School and public health nurses play a vital role in advancing health equity. 
  • Adequate funding for these nurses is essential if they are to take on that role. 
  • School nurses are front-line health care providers, serving as a bridge between the health care and education systems and other sectors.  They are specialists that address both the physical and mental health of students in the context of educational environments. 
  • They serve as both essential care providers for individuals and links to broader community health issues through the student populations they serve. 
  • Access to a school nurse is a health care equity issue for some students, especially in light of the increasing number of students who have complex health needs. environments/neighborhoods.
  • School nurses are essential for healthy kids, healthy schools, and healthy communities. 
  • School nurses also are well-positioned to work with students and families in their neighborhoods and homes to address individual and family social needs, such as access to care, healthy food, and safe and healthy environments/neighborhoods. 
  • More school nurses need the practice authority to address in creative ways the complex health and social needs of the populations they serve.
  • School nurses are a particularly critical resource for students experiencing such challenges as food insecurity, homelessness, and living in impoverished circumstances, for whom the school nurse may be the only health care professional they see regularly

The New Jersey State School Nurse Association (NJSSNA)  was given the opportunity to submit recommendations to the NJ DOE. We crafted 3 “asks” and submitted them in support of our most pressing school nursing concerns. While we don’t yet know the outcome, contributing to the conversation is an important step. 

Let’s generate momentum by sharing school health services needs with our district leaders across the country. Imagine the power of more than 95,000 school nurses flooding email in-boxes in each of our school districts with what we NEED to provide the best care possible to our students, staff and families. We need to be present and speak out loudly, in terms that everyone understands.  Feel free to edit these “asks” if they speak to the needs of your school nursing practice!

Schools will be submitting plans to their State Boards of Education as to how they will be allocating their funding from the American Recovery Plan (ARP).  Please reach out to your district administrators to make sure they are investing in Professional School Nurses.

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American Recovery Plan Funding: School Nurses’ 3 ASKs

#1-Now is the time to address inequities that have persisted in our schools

#2-Addressing the “school nurse shortage”.  

#3-Update antiquated health screening equipment and invest in electronic health records

Long before the pandemic, budget lines for school health services were painfully small.  This remains true today.  Yet, the school health office and it’s staff care for EVERY student in the school district.  It should not take a pandemic for school districts to recognize that keeping students physically and mentally ready to learn should be a priority not an aside to education.  To paraphrase former United States Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders,  “You can’t educate a child who is not healthy or keep a child healthy who is not educated.” 

On behalf of the students in our district (or state), we respectfully request that this infusion of federal funding be invested in ways that will most effectively achieve the goals of safer classrooms and schools, improved student physical and mental health, and academic readiness. 

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This is OUR TIME to ask for what we need, what our students and families need. Remember, if we don’t ask, the answer is always NO! You can ask from your health office as an individual school nurse, through your district as a team of colleagues, or from your state school nurse organization. The point is to raise your concerns, the funding is flowing, and now is our chance to get the necessary support we need to do the best job we can for our school communities. 

 

Special appreciation to the Executive Board of NJSSNA, President Donna Pleus, President-elect Eileen Gavin, and Executive Director Marie Sasso for crafting our “asks.” 

 

 

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