Reporting
Illnesses
When
should I keep my child home from
school?
There
will be
times when it is difficult to tell if your child is too ill to go to
school. Sometimes there is the worry
that they will miss important school work.
Like adults, children will have different tolerances for
discomfort and
illness. Even with common colds, some
are able to function fine while others are miserable.
If you decide to send your child to school
when he or she is on the "borderline" of being ill, it is a good idea
to have a "back up" plan if your child's condition worsens at
school. Please call school or send a
note to the teacher to let them know.
Make sure the school knows where you can be contacted. Do not send your child to school if any of
the following symptoms or conditions were present in the last 24 hours. You will be called and asked to take your
child home if any of the following conditions exist.
·
A
temperature of
100 degrees F or more. Your child should
be fever free for 24 hours before returning to school.
·
Vomiting
and/or
diarrhea two or more times during the previous evening or night. Call your child's doctor if symptoms continue
for more than 48 hours or worsen.
·
Blistery,
draining rash. Also, any undiagnosed
rash must be evaluated by a physician.
·
Diagnosed
with a
bacterial infection like strep throat.
Your child may return to school after taking prescribed
antibiotics for
24 hours.
·
Thick
mucus or
pus draining from eye or "pink eye."
Your child can attend school 24 hours after the start of
treatment.
·
Severe
headache. Your child will be too
uncomfortable in school if he/she has a severe headache.
·
Ear
pain with
fever or drainage. Your child can attend
school after receiving medical treatment for an ear infection.
·
Live
lice or the
presence of nits (lice eggs). Must be
cleared by the school nurse before returning to class.
·
Sore
throat,
especially with fever or swollen glands in the neck.
·
Unusually
tired,
pale, difficult to wake, confused or irritable, lack of appetite.
·
Long
term
nasal discharge and/or chronic cough.
·
Continuous
cough. It will be difficult for your child and other students to
concentrate.
In
addition, all
communicable diseases should be reported to the school, even if
students
develop them over the weekend and are well enough to return to school
by
Monday. It is important for the school
nurses to be able to track infectious disease occurrences throughout
the
various schools in order to better provide parents or staff with
information
about their prevalence and any necessary precautions.
The following are examples of conditions
which should be reported, but by no means is
this list exhaustive:
·
chickenpox or
shingles
·
strep throat or scarlet fever
·
pinkeye (conjunctivitis)
·
ringworm
·
fifth's disease
·
impetigo
·
scabies
·
head lice
·
rotovirus
·
influenza
·
mononucleosis
·
meningitis
·
hand, foot and mouth disease
WEB LINK:
Childhood
Infections