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allows a nurse to use the EpiPen on any student believed to be having a life-threatening reaction, even if the child has not been diagnosed with an allergy.
Students will also be allowed to carry and self-administer their own Epi-pens with the written approval of a parent or guardian.
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allow students to carry and self-administer asthma inhalers
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Only nurses are supposed to administer epipens and most of CPS's nurses are part-time.
"We know it's a big loophole. It was one of the compromises we had to reach to get the legislation passed," Jobrack says.
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Federal legislation sponsored by Illinois Sens. Dick Durbin, a Democrat, and Sen. Mark Kirk, a Republican, would reward states that require schools to keep a supply of the injectors on hand and allow authorized school personnel to use them if a student has an allergic reaction. The bill also has a provision that would require those states to have "Good Samaritan" laws
QuoteHere's the story. They passed the "school" epi pen law after tragedy with Katelyn last December.
www.wgntv.com/wgntv-quinnepipens-aug15,0,4211365.story
QuoteI've been watching this story on the local news.
It's good it's been passed; it's not good that it took a child's death to make it happen.
QuoteIt always seems to.
There is a part of me that wishes that EACH of these bits of legislation carried a child's name with them... because then it might be a lot harder for people to remain so wilfully ignorant about the fact that kids DO really die from food allergies.
Besides, these children deserve such a memorial and so do their families, quite bluntly.