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1.
Womens Health (Lond) ; 20: 17455057241247793, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38733209

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to understand how school nurses, often the first line of defense for menstruating adolescents, use communication to assist adolescents in destigmatizing menstruation. DESIGN: I conducted semi-structured narrative interviews with nine nurses employed in a large school district in Northeast Indiana. METHODS: Interviews were coded, categorized, and used a phronetic iterative approach. RESULTS: Analysis determines that nurses assist menstruating students using steps toward accepting menstruation and suggesting ways to avoid menstrual stigmatization. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that school nurses use positive language to assist students in handling their menstruation problems, develop allyships with parents and other teachers, and stress menstrual education. This study highlights the need for more funding for menstrual products and additional school nurses.


Subject(s)
Menstruation , School Nursing , Social Stigma , Humans , Female , Adolescent , Menstruation/psychology , Indiana , Communication , Qualitative Research , Adult , Interviews as Topic , Students/psychology , Students/statistics & numerical data
2.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(3): 114, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38693684
5.
Hisp Health Care Int ; 22(2): 62, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38567390
6.
J Sch Nurs ; 40(3): 245-246, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557314
7.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(3): 118-119, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38613134

ABSTRACT

Have you ever wondered how the National Association of School Nurses (NASN) supports school nursing research and clinical practice degree advancement or how they provide opportunities to strengthen advocacy skills? NASN does this work through an endowment fund which provides annual scholarships and grants to members to support their various professional endeavors.


Subject(s)
School Nursing , Societies, Nursing , School Nursing/economics , Humans , Societies, Nursing/economics , United States , Nursing Research/economics , Fund Raising
8.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(3): 115-117, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38622847
9.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(3): 140-147, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38623932

ABSTRACT

School nursing is a unique nursing specialty that benefits from a practice framework that aids school nurses in explaining and accomplishing their role. In 2016, the NASN debuted its Framework for 21st Century School Nursing Practice™, which has shaped school nursing practice as well as education, leadership, research, and collaboration with stakeholders. However, practice frameworks are not meant to remain the same indefinitely. Therefore, NASN evaluated and updated the Framework to ensure its continued alignment with the education and healthcare landscape. The purpose of this article is to share the history of the Framework for 21st Century School Nursing Practice™ development, provide the rationale for the update, and discuss the strategic process NASN used to update its Framework now entitled the School Nursing Practice Framework™.


Subject(s)
School Nursing , Humans , Societies, Nursing , United States , Nurse's Role
10.
Public Health Nurs ; 41(3): 543-554, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38497562

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: As students returned to school, school nurses were responsible for infection control, communication, and the preparation of supplies and facilities. School nurses in the Pacific Northwest US demonstrated a higher prevalence of mental health symptoms in the years since the pandemic began, suggesting that their experience may have been unique. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to explore the stressors of school nurses in the Pacific Northwest at two time points. DESIGN: This study is a qualitative, descriptive analysis of anonymous survey responses collected in June of 2021 (n = 333) and between October and December 2021 (n = 284). SAMPLE: Self-identifying school nurses working in K-12 schools in Washington State were invited to participate. MEASUREMENTS: Participants completed open-ended survey questions designed to elicit their experiences during the pandemic. RESULTS: Four themes emerged from the data: (1) isolation from administration and the school community, (2) COVID-19-related workload, (3) disorganized and inconsistent communication, and (4) concern for students, themselves, and others. CONCLUSIONS: School nurses played a vital public health role during the pandemic. However, their effectiveness may not have been fully utilized and sometimes undermined. Lastly, our findings highlight the difficulties encountered in implementing the changing scientific and public health guidance during the pandemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Nurses , School Nursing , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Mental Health , Infection Control
11.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(3): 130-134, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38484155

ABSTRACT

The National Association of State School Nurse Consultants (NASSNC) recently issued two action agendas for school nurses. The first action agenda promotes school nurses using their credentials in all communications, documenting their expertise and asserting their legal authority to practice professional nursing. The focus is on the baccalaureate-prepared registered nurse (RN) being the entry level preparation for school nursing. The second action agenda suggests school nurses can increase school administrator support by explaining their specialty practice and offers several marketing strategies. School nurses are invited to access the RN Action Agendas at the NASSNC website link provided.


Subject(s)
Consultants , School Nursing , Humans , United States , Societies, Nursing , Nurse's Role
12.
Soc Sci Med ; 348: 116809, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38547808

ABSTRACT

Representations of migrants influence how they are perceived by others. Hence, how children who have migrated or whose parents have migrated (Children in Migrant Families: CMFs) are represented in clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for Swedish school health services (SHS) may influence how they are perceived by school nurses. Thus, this study aimed to explore representations of CMFs in school nurses' CPGs. Data consisted of 130 CPGs from municipalities in Sweden. Documents were analyzed using the "What is the Problem Represented to be" (WPR) approach - an analytic strategy for investigating embedded assumptions of "problems". In the analysis, Sarah Ahmed's work on "strangers" and "strangeness" was applied. In the CPGs, the CMFs and their health were repeatedly mentioned in conjunction with the need for particular or additional actions, efforts, or routines when assessing or discussing their health, to a degree beyond what is "usually" provided. This need was motivated by representing the CMFs and their health as being the same, yet different in relation to "Swedish" children in general. Thus, the children were not only represented as different, but they were "foreignized". These representations of difference and foreignness placed the children on a continuum in relation to what is recognized as "familiar" in their health, and constructed elastic boundaries between the strange and the familiar. By illustrating how these boundaries were used for difference-making between "familiar" and "strange", this study showed how CMFs are alternately represented as similar and different, and foreignized while provided with SHS aiming to make them "familiar".


Subject(s)
School Health Services , Transients and Migrants , Humans , Sweden , Transients and Migrants/psychology , Child , Female , School Nursing , Male
13.
NASN Sch Nurse ; 39(2): 75-83, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38443757

ABSTRACT

This article is the third and final article in a series exploring the WHAT, WHY, and HOW of data collection and data utilization. The final step, the HOW of data submission, provides discussion and guidance in contributing your data to the collective voice, including submitting data from the school, district, state, and national levels. Submitting individual school nursing data enriches the bigger story and increases the awareness and meaningfulness of school health data, the role of the school nurse as an integral member of the school community, and the connections of student health and academic outcomes. This article will also explore how to submit your school health data and the opportunities to submit it to district, state, or national levels, including to the National School Health Data Set: Every Student Counts! (ESC!).


Subject(s)
School Nursing , Humans , Data Collection , Schools , Students
14.
J Pediatr Nurs ; 76: 16-22, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38309192

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There is limited information about expert school nurses' experiences regarding the reopening of schools in the school setting during the COVID-19 pandemic. PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore the views and experiences of reopening schools among expert school nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: We conducted semi-structured interviews with five focus groups of 24 school nurses. A grounded theory methodology was used to analyze emergent concepts, categories, and themes. DISCUSSION: We identified five themes related to the experiences of expert school nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic: unprepared response system, fighting alone, centering the response system, redefining roles, and together against. CONCLUSION: Despite the high workload of school nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic, the expert school nurses led to clarification and expansion of the role of the school nurse role, and highlighted the relationships among school staff who were essential participants of the school health team during the pandemic. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: It is imperative to shift the perception that school nurses are health professionals who play key managerial roles with collaboration within and beyond the school.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Focus Groups , Nurse's Role , Qualitative Research , School Nursing , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/nursing , School Nursing/organization & administration , Female , Male , Adult , Pandemics , School Health Services/organization & administration , SARS-CoV-2 , Middle Aged , Schools
15.
J Sch Health ; 94(5): 443-452, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38321623

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: State-level leadership and conditions are instrumental to local and regional comprehensive school mental health system (CSMHS) quality, sustainability, and growth. However, systematic documentation of state-level school mental health (SMH) policy, infrastructure, funding, and practice is limited. METHODS: Using a multi-phase, multi-method process, we developed the State School Mental Health Profile (State Profile) to offer a comprehensive landscape of state SMH efforts. State leaders in 25 states completed the State Profile once over a 3-year data collection period. Mixed methods results are reported in 8 domains. RESULTS: State education agencies were reportedly most involved in SMH technical assistance, advocacy, leadership, funding, and service provision, with mental health agencies reported as second most involved. Nearly half of state respondents reported having a state-level SMH director or coordinator. Policies with the greatest perceived impact require implementation of and funding for SMH services and supports. Despite leveraging multiple sources of funding, most states emphasized lack of funding as a primary barrier to establishing CSMHSs. All states reported staffing shortages. CONCLUSION: The State Profile can assist multi-agency state leadership teams to self-assess policy, infrastructure, and resources to support CSMHSs statewide. Findings point to areas of opportunity to advance equity across resource allocation, service provision, and policy development.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services , School Nursing , Humans , United States , Mental Health , Policy Making , Schools
16.
Rev. esp. salud pública ; 98: e202402013, Feb. 2024. ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-231356

ABSTRACT

Fundamentos: la enseñanza de los primeros auxilios (ppaa) a escolares y jóvenes es una estrategia prioritaria en salud pública. El objetivo de este trabajo fue revisar y analizar la nueva legislación educativa en el marco curricular de ppaa, lo cual es necesario para ofrecer a los docentes y sanitarios una guía práctica que oriente la enseñanza para formar a primeros intervinientes en las diferentes etapas escolares. Métodos: un grupo de cuatro expertos con experiencia curricular en los diferentes niveles educativos, así como en el campo de los ppaa, participaron en este análisis. La metodología consistió en un enfoque de análisis de consenso sobre el contenido de los reales decretos (rd) de educación primaria (rd 157/2022), secundaria (rd 217/2022) y bachillerato (rd 243/2022) que desarrollan curricularmente la ley orgánica 3/2020 (lomloe). Resultados: en el análisis de los tres rd se encontraron diez conceptos generales: prevención de accidentes; protocolo proteger, alertar, socorrer (pas); protocolo 1-1-2; posición lateral de seguridad (pls); reanimación cardiopulmonar (rcp); desfibrilador externo automático o semiautomático (dea/desa); obstrucción de vía aérea por cuerpo extraño (ovace); ppaa; traslado de accidentados; e ictus. A lo largo de todas las etapas educativas fueron veintisiete las veces en que aparecían explícitamente contenidos vinculados con la prevención de accidentes o al aprendizaje de ppaa. Conclusiones: el currículo actual dota de contenido en materia de ppaa desde los ocho-nueve años (3º de educación primaria). Al finalizar la enseñanza secundaria obligatoria, todo el alumnado debería saber identificar la parada cardíaca, alertar a los servicios de emergencias, iniciar las maniobras de reanimación, usar el desfibrilador y saber actuar ante un atragantamiento.(AU)


Background: teaching first aid (fa) to children and young people is a priority strategy in public health. The aim of this paper was to review and analyze new educational legislation within the fa curriculum framework, which is necessary for providing teachers and healthcare professionals with a practical guide that guides teaching to train first responders in different school stages.methods: a group of four experts with curricular experience at different educational levels, as well as in the field of fa, partici-pated in this analysis. The methodology involved a consensus analysis approach on the content of the spanish royal decrees (rd) for primary education (rd 157/2022), secondary education (rd 217/2022), and baccalaureate (rd 243/2022) that develop the curriculum of the organic law 3/2020 (lomloe).results: in the analysis of the three rd, ten general concepts were identified: accident prevention; protocol protect, alert, assist (pas); 1-1-2 protocol; recovery position (pls); cardiopulmonary resuscitation (cpr); automated external or semi-automatic defibrillator (aed); foreign body airway obstruction (fbao); fa; transportation of the injured; and stroke. Throughout all educational stages, in twenty-seven instances appeared content explicitly related to accident prevention or the learning of fa.conclusions: the current curriculum provides fa content from the age of eight-nine (3rd year of primary education). By the end of compulsory education, all students should be able to identify cardiac arrest, alert emergency services, initiate resuscitation maneuvers, use the defibrillator, and know how to respond to choking incidents.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Child , Adolescent , School Nursing , First Aid/methods , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/education , Curriculum , Faculty/education , Accident Prevention , Public Health , Stroke , Defibrillators , Clinical Protocols
17.
Clin Nurs Res ; 33(2-3): 189-202, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38197319

ABSTRACT

The school nurse has a crucial role in the United States and the United Kingdom and has their own expertise dedicated to school assistance for children, families, school staff, and the community. This study aims to identify the role and skills of the school nurse and understand the effects of COVID-19 on nursing skills in the following countries: The United States, the United Kingdom, and Italy. A Scoping Review was conducted following the JBI methodology for scoping reviews, following the PRISMA-ScR guidelines. Three databases were consulted: PubMed, Cinahl, and Scopus. In all, 58 studies met the eligibility criteria and were included. 93.1% of the studies were carried out in the United States, 5.2% in the United Kingdom, and 1.7% in Italy. 34.5% of the articles were published in 2020, 15.5% in 2021, 31% in 2022, and 19% in 2023. 22.4% of the studies included in the review concerned health promotion and education. Regarding the methodology of the studies, 41.5% of the studies were commentary papers, 15.5% were observational studies, and 12% were cross-sectional studies. Considering the effects of the school nurse in the United States and the United Kingdom, it is possible to reflect on how the systematic presence of a nurse could also have benefits in Italy.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Nurse's Role , School Nursing , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Health Promotion , Italy/epidemiology , Pandemics , United Kingdom/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology
18.
J Sch Health ; 94(5): 481, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38225814

ABSTRACT

Withdrawal: 'Baseline Sociodemographic Characteristics and Mental Health Status of Primary Caregivers and Children Attending Schools on the Navajo Nation and White Mountain Apache Tribe During COVID-19' by Shannon Archuleta MPH, Joshuaa D. Allison-Burbank PhD, Allison Ingalls MPH, Renae Begay MPH, Ryan Grass BS, Francene Larzelere PhD, Vanessa Begaye BS, Lacey Howe BS, Alicia Tsosie BS, Angelina Phoebe Keryte BA, Emily E. Haroz PhD, J Sch Health 2024, 10.1111/josh.13419. The above article, published online on 15 January 2024 in Wiley Online Library (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/josh.13419) has been withdrawn by agreement between the authors, the journal's Editor in Chief, Michael W. Long, the American School Health Association and Wiley Periodicals LLC. The withdrawal has been agreed because consent for publication from one of the tribes participating in the study was pending at the time of publication.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , School Nursing , Child , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Caregivers , Schools , Health Status
19.
J Sch Health ; 94(5): 462-468, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38234257

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: School-based health centers (SBHCs) are ideal settings to address social needs of youth and families. Case managers can play a vital role in social care interventions. METHODS: We piloted a program to incorporate a Case Manager into the care team of 1 SBHC serving 2 local schools with over 900 students and their surrounding communities. This project's purpose was to evaluate program feasibility, utilization, and acceptability. Our mixed-methods evaluation included analyses of data from electronic health records, client satisfaction surveys, and staff interviews. RESULTS: During the 6-month pilot, the Case Manager served 133 clients (about one third of all SBHC clients served) through 593 contacts. Most contacts included referrals to support services (90%) and 37% addressed newcomer immigrant adjustment. All 37 respondents to the satisfaction survey during the 3-month administration period (44% response rate) reported that the Case Manager made them feel comfortable asking for help; 95% reported getting the help they needed. The 7 SBHC staff interviewed shared many program benefits, including increased time for clinical services. IMPLICATIONS FOR SCHOOL HEALTH POLICY, PRACTICE, AND EQUITY: Inequities in children's health and educational achievement are influenced by structural factors. Results from our pilot program demonstrate that SBHCs may be well-positioned to deliver social care interventions and that case managers enhance the ability to deliver quality care. CONCLUSIONS: School-based programs to address unmet social needs are critical to supporting learning and wellness for all youth. Robust studies are needed to further test the impacts of case management in SBHCs.


Subject(s)
School Health Services , School Nursing , Child , Humans , Adolescent , Case Management , Schools , Students
20.
J Sch Health ; 94(4): 299-307, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38239183

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Substance use in minoritized youth is associated with negative long-term health and life outcomes. The present study explores perspectives of school stakeholders at urban minority-serving schools regarding integration of an evidence-based intervention, screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) into existing school prevention models. METHODS: Twenty-two participants were interviewed using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research to identify barriers and facilitators to SBIRT implementation. Qualitative data were transcribed, coded, and analyzed. RESULTS: Four major themes related to barriers to SBIRT implementation included: lack of training, unclear role expectations, student confidentiality, and punitive school climates. The 3 major facilitators included: the feasibility of the intervention, its fit within multi-tiered systems of support, and the districts increasing collaboration with community mental health providers. These major themes along with other minor themes are discussed. IMPLICATIONS FOR SCHOOL HEALTH POLICY, PRACTICE, AND EQUITY: SBIRT implementation within low-income, minority-serving schools may reduce substance use disparities among minoritized youth, improving health and life outcomes. Recommendations addressed training, school climate, and student engagement, highlighting a collaborative and supportive approach involving all stakeholders. CONCLUSIONS: While SBIRT implementation has barriers and facilitators, overall, school staff were optimistic about implementation. In light of these findings, additional research should embed SBIRT in these settings.


Subject(s)
School Nursing , Substance-Related Disorders , Humans , Adolescent , Crisis Intervention , Referral and Consultation , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , School Health Services , Mass Screening
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