Giving more than Band-Aids
Marisa O’Neil
A giant sign with warm wishes from students at College Park
Elementary School hung on a wall at the school district.
“She gives us Band-Aids when we get hurt,” one read. “She’s really
good at helping us,” another wrote about school nurse Susan Curtin.
“She’s beautiful like an angel,” read another.
The children’s card provided a fitting backdrop for a special
luncheon honoring Newport-Mesa school nurses on National School Nurse
Day Wednesday. The day of recognition falls in the middle of National
Nurses Week, which also happens during the month when the school
district honors all its teachers and employees.
“This is a good group of women,” school board member Martha Fluor
said at the luncheon. “They keep children healthy and provide a
wonderful service.”
Newport-Mesa Unified School District has 13 nurses who split their
days between different schools. All of them carry pagers for
emergencies.
They provide care for everything from runny noses to fingers
sliced during shop class. On top of that, they provide health
screening, nutrition education and referral to outside agencies and
low-cost healthcare options for uninsured patients, said Marcia
BMarthaler, coordinator of health services for the district.
“For many families, we are their link to the healthcare system,”
nurse Leslie Dootson said. “In one case, someone was injured on a
Saturday and waited with a broken collarbone until Monday to see the
school nurse.”
Maintaining school health services in the face of budget cuts is
important to help students perform at their best, BMarthaler said
“If they can’t see well, hear well, if their asthma is bothering
them, if they need medicine, if there’s abuse at home, if they’re not
healthy, they’re not able to learn,” BMarthaler said.
The Orange County School Nurse Assn. also gave its annual Halo
Award to Jane Garland, coordinator of public information and special
projects for the district on Wednesday. Orange County’s School Nurse
of the Year, Rea Elementary School nurse Merry Grasska, nominated
Garland for her work coordinating school readiness programs and
health services for students.
“We [nurses] are healthcare providers in an educational
situation,” Grasska said. “People focus on the education aspects, but
health affects a child’s ability to learn. [Garland] really
understands that connection.”
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