Dear webmaster,
Since someone chose to post an inflammatory story of Tom Wilkinson's decision to ban a special-needs nurse from Tussing Elementary, a more balanced version should also be posted.
Apparently, this nurse caused a problem with accusing some teachers of using inappropriate force to calm down another special-needs student. Both the school and Children Services found the accusation to be unfounded.
Now she ''simply wants to care for Royal's daugher.''
It's a little late for that, isn't it?
Disabled girl?’s nurse banned from school
Mother fights woman?’s removal, says she has right to choose who cares for her child
Saturday, March 03, 2007
Charlie Boss
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
It can be a look in the eye or a twitch in the face, but Keira Holloway knows when her 7-year-old charge is happy or sad, uneasy or upset.
The girl uses a wheelchair and is nonverbal, so she relies on Holloway to watch her breathe, convey her thoughts to others and help her understand what is going on around her.
Now, the nurse won?’t be allowed to help the second-grader at Tussing Elementary after the principal banned Holloway from the school. Tom Wilkinson said Holloway?’s presence was disruptive.
The district has offered to provide a nurse, but the girl?’s mother wants to keep using Holloway.
''I have a right to choose a nurse for my own daughter,'' Charmelle Royal said. She would not identify the girl?’s disabilities, but Pickerington school officials acknowledge that she needs constant care.
Thanks to medical advances, students who might have been bedridden in the past now increasingly can attend school. And federal laws that require schools to provide therapy, nursing services and other resources also play a role.
''There are more kids with severe health problems in the school districts, and they need attention,'' said Sue Will, president of the National Association of School Nurses.
Mark Semer, special-education director at Gahanna-Jefferson schools, said the district has had 10 students in the past five years who needed nursing aides during school. ''There is an increased need for this service,'' he said.
School nurses tend to be employed by the districts, but private-duty nurses like Holloway are not unheard of in schools, education experts said.
Of 1,800 special-needs students, Hilliard has three who have private nurses in school with them.
''It?’s a rare occurrence because we can provide that service,'' Hilliard spokeswoman Michelle Wray said.
In Franklin County, parents can get nursing assistance from the county Educational Service Center and the Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, which can provide nurses and medical aides for students. Nursing services can be paid through Medicaid waivers, insurance or through the school district. Royal wouldn?’t say how Holloway is paid.
There?’s no easy solution for Holloway?’s patient.
By Tussing Mom
Since someone chose to post an inflammatory story of Tom Wilkinson's decision to ban a special-needs nurse from Tussing Elementary, a more balanced version should also be posted.
Apparently, this nurse caused a problem with accusing some teachers of using inappropriate force to calm down another special-needs student. Both the school and Children Services found the accusation to be unfounded.
Now she ''simply wants to care for Royal's daugher.''
It's a little late for that, isn't it?
Disabled girl?’s nurse banned from school
Mother fights woman?’s removal, says she has right to choose who cares for her child
Saturday, March 03, 2007
Charlie Boss
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
It can be a look in the eye or a twitch in the face, but Keira Holloway knows when her 7-year-old charge is happy or sad, uneasy or upset.
The girl uses a wheelchair and is nonverbal, so she relies on Holloway to watch her breathe, convey her thoughts to others and help her understand what is going on around her.
Now, the nurse won?’t be allowed to help the second-grader at Tussing Elementary after the principal banned Holloway from the school. Tom Wilkinson said Holloway?’s presence was disruptive.
The district has offered to provide a nurse, but the girl?’s mother wants to keep using Holloway.
''I have a right to choose a nurse for my own daughter,'' Charmelle Royal said. She would not identify the girl?’s disabilities, but Pickerington school officials acknowledge that she needs constant care.
Thanks to medical advances, students who might have been bedridden in the past now increasingly can attend school. And federal laws that require schools to provide therapy, nursing services and other resources also play a role.
''There are more kids with severe health problems in the school districts, and they need attention,'' said Sue Will, president of the National Association of School Nurses.
Mark Semer, special-education director at Gahanna-Jefferson schools, said the district has had 10 students in the past five years who needed nursing aides during school. ''There is an increased need for this service,'' he said.
School nurses tend to be employed by the districts, but private-duty nurses like Holloway are not unheard of in schools, education experts said.
Of 1,800 special-needs students, Hilliard has three who have private nurses in school with them.
''It?’s a rare occurrence because we can provide that service,'' Hilliard spokeswoman Michelle Wray said.
In Franklin County, parents can get nursing assistance from the county Educational Service Center and the Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, which can provide nurses and medical aides for students. Nursing services can be paid through Medicaid waivers, insurance or through the school district. Royal wouldn?’t say how Holloway is paid.
There?’s no easy solution for Holloway?’s patient.
By Tussing Mom