Smokers help fund a new school nurse
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Marisa O’Neil
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District has smokers to thank for a
new school nurse who will start by the end of the school year.
Money for that position will come from Proposition 10, the
California Children and Families Act of 1998 that added a
50-cents-per-pack tax to cigarettes to be used for early childhood
development programs. The Children and Families Commission of Orange
County, which doles out that money locally, announced this week, the
allocation of $1 million for school nurses at an average of one per
district.
The program is partnering with the American Academy of Pediatrics.
“Any time we can look at adding a nurse [in the district] is
wonderful,” said Marcia BMarthaler, coordinator of health services
for the school district. “Traditionally, school nurses are spread
real thin.”
Currently the district has 13 nurses employed full and part time
to cover its schools, after school programs and Hope Healthy Start
Clinic, BMarthaler said. That works out to 8.4 school nurses to cover
the district’s 31 kindergarten through 12th-grade schools.
The new nurse positions in Orange County will serve children up to
age 5, said Kelly Pijl, spokeswoman for the Children and Families
Commission of Orange County. Proposition 10 language specifically
identifies that age group as being in need of healthcare.
“The commission sees a need in the community for children to be
healthy and ready to learn before they start school,” Pijl said. “And
if they’re healthy early in their lives, that will help them be
healthy and successful later in their lives.”
Newport-Mesa has essentially one nurse for its preschool programs
at Whittier, Wilson and Harper schools. Two nurses split their time
between the schools and the Hope clinic, meaning each school gets a
nurse for two or three days each week.
Getting a new nurse for that age group means they can screen more
children for health problems and developmental problems, BMarthaler
said. Children that age who are seen in the clinic and in schools
often do not have health insurance, so the school nurses may provide
the only health care or screening they receive.
“The sooner we catch any health issues they may have deal with,
the sooner we can take care of them and help them be ready for
school,” she said. “We want to take them to their optimal level of
health so they can learn and progress much better.”
Countywide, the commission is counting on supplying 27 new nurses.
Each district, depending on its size, will get either one or two
nurses or a half-time nurse. Newport-Mesa, Pijl said, will get a new
one before school is out for the year.
The commission is hiring a consultant to manage the program and
expedite the process of hiring the nurses, she said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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