Quote from: maeve on September 22, 2011, 12:57:37 PMQuote from: rebekahc on September 22, 2011, 12:07:09 PM
I think for children who self-carry everywhere having Benadryl in the bag is a good idea if it's something they need or might use.
However, at school in an emergency, they don't need the Benadryl - just the Epi. They can get Benadryl later from the nurse if the doctor wants the child to have it after/along with the Epi. For mild Benadryl-only symptoms the child and/or teacher should not be the ones giving it - the school nurse should, so they wouldn't use the self-carry Benadryl anyway. For anaphylaxis, Epi is what's important - the Benadryl is just for comfort and it can wait until the nurse administers it, so no need to self-carry it then either.
During our 504 review meeting prior to the start of the school year, the staff suggested when we were discussing DD's self-carry that we not put Benadryl in her purse. Their thought was that if Epi is what should be administered in the event of a reaction, that not having the Benadryl in the pack would eliminate the choice of someone giving her Benadryl in lieu of Epi. (I'm probably not explaining that well. Their point, and I think it's a good one, is that it makes the decision process of what to do in a reaction easier, quicker, and really more correct.)
Quote from: CMdeux on September 22, 2011, 04:58:15 PM
it's REALLY weird for the school to require a non-prescription medication when a physician hasn't required one to be included in the action plan... and weirder STILL for them to then insist on labeling it with a prescription label when it's an OTC medication to begin with.
Quote from: CMdeux on September 22, 2011, 02:33:02 PM
But my question is, then doesn't that put ADDITIONAL onus on the child/the parents to REMEMBER TO ADD IT BACK whenever the child is somewhere OTHER than school?
See, that's what I'm getting at about it being a sticky point from a management training perspective.
It's like teaching a child to TAKE OFF a medic-alert bracelet for a team sport because it's more convenient than the coach remembering to tape it.
Quote from: CMdeux on September 22, 2011, 01:57:00 PM
True....
BUT-- and bear with me, because I'm going to play devil's advocate here momentarily...
isn't that ACTUALLY asking a family to modify what they (and their physician) have determined is the best means of TEACHING the child appropriate self-advocacy and responsibility for the allergy??
Use an analogy--
suppose that (at least for the school) it is EASIER if a diabetic child doesn't carry a BGC monitor on their body... and instead ONLY carries glucagon tablets? It does, after all, 'remove' the decision-making option for everyone but the nurse.
While I can see why that is more convenient for the school,
I can also see that if it is ultimately in the child's best interests to self-carry certain items related to overall good management, then the SCHOOL is the party that needs to figure out how to make THAT work for them-- not the other way around.
KWIM?
I'm looking at this as the parent of a child who is increasingly having to be fully responsible for her own medications, however. NO WAY would I concede for her to "remove" items from her medication pack just so that someone else had rules that were simpler.
QuoteAgreed-- but doesn't the need to remove it from a self-carry pack of meds basically say that teachers can't be relied upon to do what they have been TOLD not to do?? (give benadryl)
QuoteMaybe it's because DD isn't in that kind of school setting, but I have allowed HER to decide when benadryl is appropriate and to self-medicate with it since she was about ten. She'd lose a lot of instructional/activity hours without it.
QuoteThey will also require him to carry a single does benedryl AND have a prescription on that also!?!?!?!?
Quote from: rebekahc on September 22, 2011, 02:11:59 PM
Right, but if you have a child who would not self-administer Benadryl (and simply has it in the med bag for convenience of the person who does make that decision), then, IMO, it shouldn't be in the med bag at school because the teacher shouldn't be making the Benadryl decision - only the life-saving decision. Also, no child would be allowed to self-administer Benadryl at school - the nurse would have to do that, so for mild symptoms the nurse would have to give the Benadryl anyway. With the teacher and non-medical staff it is all or nothing no matter what.