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Mrs. Mansfield

 

Our School Nurse

 

IMPORTANT LETTER RE: H1N1 VIRUS

 

 IMPORTANT LINKS:

CDC.GOV

FLU.GOV

Ocean County Health Department Contact: Leslie Terjesen
PO Box 2191 Public Information Officer
Toms River, NJ 08754-2191 732-341-9700, ext. 7224

?         The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends all residents to receive H1N1 vaccine.

 

?         The Ocean County Health Department offers H1N1 vaccine to all county residents FREE of charge.

 

?         Children under 10 years of age will need 2 doses, approximately one month apart.

Location:             Ocean County Health Department

          175 Sunset Avenue, Toms River

 

 

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Intranasal H1N1 Vaccine

?         Nasal mist flu vaccine is sprayed into the nostrils rather than injected into the muscle.  This is also called an intranasal influenza vaccine.  This vaccine is a weakened live virus vaccine.

?         The nasal mist is very safe and approved for use in healthy people 2-49 years of age who are not pregnant.

Injectable H1N1 Vaccine

?         Injectable H1N1 vaccine is inactivated (the vaccine has killed virus in it) and is injected into the muscle. 

?         The injectable is approved for use in people older than 6 months, including healthy people and people with chronic medical conditions (such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease).

  *You should not get any H1N1 vaccine if you have a severe allergy to eggs
 
.  

*You should not get Intranasal H1N1 vaccine if you have long-term chronic health conditions, a severely weakened immune system, or have close contact with a person with a severely weakened immune system.

  *Medical questions should be directed towards your primary care physician.

________________

 If you have questions about H1N1, you can call the New Jersey H1N1Hotline at 1-866-321-9571,
7 days a week from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., or the Ocean County Health
Department at 732-341-9700, ext. 7791, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. or the OCHD website at
www.ochd.org.

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REMINDER….PLEASE CALL THE SCHOOL WHEN YOUR CHILD WILL BE ABSENT.  YOU CAN LEAVE A MESSAGE ON OUR VOICE MAIL AT ANY HOUR.  THE PHONE NUMBER IS 732-793-7722, DIAL 202.  PLEASE STATE IF YOUR CHILD'S ABSENCE IS ILLNESS RELATED OR NOT ILLNESS RELATED.  IF THE ABSENCE IS ILLNESS RELATED PLEASE LEAVE A MESSAGE STATING THE SYMPTOMS OF THE ILLNESS.  EACH DAY WE MUST REPORT TO THE OCEAN COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT THE NUMBER OF STUDENTS ABSENT, AND THE REASON.  THIS INFORMATION IS CRITICAL TO MEETING STATE AND FEDERAL MANDATES.   

 Please keep your emergency phone numbers current, in case we must reach you if your child is sick or injured.  Remember that we will only release your child to the persons you have listed on your Emergency and Illness Procedure Form. 


 Important Notice:

The Lavallette School would like to inform all parents and guardians about NJ FAMILY CARE.  NJ Family Care is a federal and state funded health insurance program created to help New Jersey's uninsured children and certain low-income parents and guardians to have affordable health coverage. It is not a welfare program. NJ Family Care is for families who do not have available or affordable employer insurance, and cannot afford to pay the high cost of private health insurance.  For more information please contact Mrs. Mansfield (school nurse) or visit http://www.njfamilycare.org/index.html .

 

 

Why Do We  Need School Health Services?

The goal of health improvement services is to strengthen and facilitate the educational process by improving and protecting the health status of children and staff. Parents/guardians, childcare workers, and educational professionals know that the health and intellectual development of children are inextricably related. For this reason, the need for nursing services in schools has been recognized since the early twentieth century. State mandates have accordingly required services to prevent the spread of infectious disease, to detect developmental problems, and to assist students who become ill or injured. In New Jersey, laws concerning school health services were first enacted in 1903.

COMMON COLD FACTS

THE COMMON COLD IS THE MOST PREVALENT ILLNESS KNOWN TO HUMANS.  COLDS TRAVEL FROM ONE PERSON TO ANOTHER VIA COUGHS AND SNEEZES, BUT STUDIES HAVE ALSO SHOWN THAT COLDS ARE TRANSMITTED BY THE SPREAD OF MUCUS ON THE HANDS OF SOMEONE WHO HAS A COLD.  TO AVOID SPREADING YOUR COLD OR CATCHING SOMEONE ELSE'S:

WASH YOUR HANDS OFTEN. 

USE A DISPOSABLE TISSUE WHEN YOU SNEEZE, COUGH, OR BLOW YOUR NOSE.

AVOID TOUCHING OTHER PEOPLE AND THEIR BELONGINGS AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE.

WHY DRINK PLENTY OF FLUIDS IF YOU HAVE A COLD OR FLU?  IT HELPS TO BREAK UP ACCUMULATED SECRETIONS IN THE RESPIRATORY TRACT AND MAY ALSO DISCOURAGE COMPLICATIONS LIKE BRONCHITIS FROM DEVELOPING.

HOW CAN YOU TELL IF YOUR COLD IS REALLY THE FLU?  THE MOST TELLING SYMPTOMS THAT DIFFERENTIATE A COLD FROM THE FLU ARE FATIGUE AND MUSCLE ACHES;  THESE ARE NORMALLY ABSENT WITH A COLD.


Special Notes

Children entering Kindergarten this year must be 5 on or before October 1, 2010.  Please bring the child’s official raised seal birth certificate,  proof of residency (rental receipt, lease, or tax bill), along with proof of immunizations and a physical examination within the last six months.

State of New Jersey immunization requirements are 4 Diphtheria, Pertusis, and Tetanus vaccine, 3 Polio vaccine, 3 Hepatitis B Vaccine, and 2 MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella vaccine). Varicella vaccine (chicken pox) and at least 1 HIB are also required.  The last DTaP and Polio must be given after the age of 4. 

Health Requirements

STUDENTS  ENTERING GRADE 6 ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE COMPLETED THEIR HEPATITIS B VACCINE SERIES.

NEW STATE REGULATIONS

EVERY CHILD BORN ON OR AFTER JANUARY 1, 1997 AND ENTERING OR ATTENDING GRADE SIX SHALL HAVE RECEIVED ONE DOSE OF Tdap  (TETANUS, DIPHTHERIA, ACELLULAR PERTUSSIS ) GIVEN NO EARLIER THAN THE 10TH BIRTHDAY.

CHILDREN ENTERING OR ATTENDING GRADE SIX ON OR AFTER SEPTEMBER 1, 2008, WHO RECEIVED A Td BOOSTER DOSE LESS THAN FIVE YEARS SHALL NOT BE REQUIRED TO RECEIVED A Tdap DOSE UNTIL FIVE YEARS HAVE ELAPSED FROM THE LAST DTP/DTaP OR TD DOSE.

EVERY CHILD BORN ON OR AFTER JANUARY 1, 1997, AND ENTERING OR ATTENDING GRADE SIX SHALL HAVE RECEIVED ONE DOSE OF A MENINGOCOCCAL-CONTAINING VACCINE, SUCH AS THE MEDICALLY-PREFERRED MENINGOCOCCAL CONJUGATE VACCINE.  *THIS APPLIES TO STUDENTS WHEN THEY TURN 11 YEARS OF AGE

A 10 YEAR OLD ENTERING SIXTH GRADE WILL NOT BE REQUIRED TO RECEIVE THE PREFERRED MENINGOCOCCAL CONJUGATE VACCINE, MENACTRA UNTIL THEY TURN 11 YEARS OF AGE.  THAT HOLDS TRUE FOR THE Tdap VACCINE AS WELL.

 

What You Should Know About. . .

Head Lice

What are head lice?

Head lice are small, wingless, grayish-white insects, about 1/16 to 1/8 inch in length, which spend their entire life cycle on the head of humans as bloodsucking external parasites. Head lice have claws especially adapted for clinging to hair shafts.

Where are head lice found?

Head lice are rarely found off the head. They are most commonly found in the hair above and behind the ears and near the nape of the neck.

What is a "nit"?

The nit is a louse egg which is always glued by the female to the base of the hair shaft, no more than 1/8 inch from the scalp. A female can lay 50-150 eggs over a three to four-week period.

What is the life cycle of the head louse?

Head lice eggs hatch in seven to nine days into the first nymph stage, which looks like a miniature adult. The nymph takes a blood meal by biting the scalp soon after hatching and continues to feed every three to six hours. In about nine days, the louse will have passed through two more nymphal stages and have achieved the adult stage. The adult remains on the head for its entire lifetime.

Will cleanliness prevent head lice?

No. Infestations are not prevented or influenced by personal or household cleanliness, use of shampoos or length of hair. All social and economic groups can be affected by head lice, but African Americans are much less frequently infested than other racial groups.

How does a person get head lice?

Head lice are usually transmitted by direct contact with the head or hair of an infested person. Transmission can also occur through the sharing of personal items, such as hats, headbands or coats, or the storage of these items together, however this is much less likely.

How long do head lice live away from the head?

Head lice cannot normally survive for more than 48 hours without a blood meal; therefore, they will not survive for long off the head. Very few nits will hatch away from the head, and any nymphs which emerge will die very soon without a blood meal.

What are the symptoms of pediculosis (an infestation of head lice)?

While persons with light infestations may not notice any problem, itching is the most common symptom, caused by an allergic reaction to the bites. Other symptoms may include a tickling feeling of something moving in the hair and sores on the head caused by scratching.

How can you detect a head lice infestation?

Detection of nits, nymphs or adult lice is the only way to confirm the presence of lice. It requires a thorough examination of the scalp. Nymphs and adults move quickly and are often difficult to observe. Finding nits close to the scalp is the usual way to confirm an infestation. However, finding nits which are more than 1/4 inch from the scalp usually indicates that they are old and not viable, despite being firmly cemented to the hair.

Can head lice transmit any diseases?

Head lice do not transmit any diseases. Sores caused by scratching and crusting can result in secondary bacterial infections.

What is the treatment for pediculosis?

To treat a head lice infestation, an over-the-counter (OTC) or prescription shampoo, lotion or cream rinse is used. The instructions of your health care provider and the product label should be followed carefully when using any pesticide medication. Most head lice products recommend a second treatment in seven to 10 days after the first treatment, in order to kill any nymphs which emerge from the eggs. Treatment failures are common, as head lice can be resistant to some products.

Will the medications kill the nits?

Most products are not completely ovicidal (kills all the eggs). Most head lice products recommend a second treatment in seven to 10 days after the first treatment in order to kill any nymphs which emerge from the eggs.

How effective are alternative treatments?

Many alternatives to pediculicides (products designed to treat lice) have been promoted because of treatment failures. Unfortunately, there is little documentation that these

methods are effective at killing the lice and nits on the head. Some of these remedies include olive oil, mayonnaise, tea tree oil, petroleum jelly and hair dryers. Among substances which should never be used are kerosene, gasoline and pesticides not registered for treatment of lice, such as diazinon.

Is it necessary to remove all the nits?

Removal of nits after treatment with a pediculicide is not necessary to prevent spread, because only live lice cause an infestation. Individuals may want to remove nits for aesthetic reasons or to decrease diagnostic confusion.

How difficult is it to remove all the nits?

Nit removal can be difficult and tedious. Fine-toothed "nit combs" are available to make the process easier (some people prefer flea combs, fingernails or tweezers). Certain commercial products and white vinegar may help to loosen the glue holding the nits to the hair, but it will often take many hours over a period of days to remove all of the nits.

How can my family avoid being infested?

All close contacts and family members of an infested person should be examined, but only those with live lice or nits within ˝ inch of the scalp should be treated. It may also be prudent to treat family members who share a bed with the infested person, even if no live lice are found.

What else can be done to prevent the spread of head lice?

It is probably impossible to totally prevent head lice infestations. Young children come into close head-to-head contact with each other frequently. It is prudent for children to be taught not to share personal items such as combs, brushes, and hats.

Should insecticide sprays be used in the house or school?

Since lice do not survive for long off the scalp, the use of environmental insecticide sprays is not necessary. Vacuuming carpets and upholstered furniture will remove any stray lice or nits.

 

 

 

 

 

Mandated School Health Service

Related Educational Function

Immunizations for school attendance

Prevention of epidemics and illness in the school and community

Exclusion of students with infectious conditions

Reduction of absenteeism for students and staff

Athletic physicals

Assurance that students are healthy to participate in athletic competition

Vision and hearing screening

Identification of potential barriers to learning

Care for urgent illness or injury

Creation of safe, secure environment

Care of special needs students

Optimization of learning during time in school

Administration of medication

Reduction of absences

Weight and height measurements

To monitor growth and development

Scoliosis screening  for ages 10-18

Early identification is essential in control of curvatures of the spine  

 

 

NEWS IN THE NURSE’S OFFICE.

 Lyme Disease News

Remember, Deer ticks are active year round, as long as the temperature is over 35 degrees F.  Wear light colored clothing and stay out of tall grasses and overgrown areas when participating in outdoor activities.  If you notice a tick on your body, remove it promptly with fine-pointed tweezers, place on the mouth, not the head of body, as close to the skin as possible.  Do not put petroleum jelly or hot objects such as cigarettes or burnt matches on the tick as this will increase your chance of infection by causing the tick to inject its bacteria.  Wash the area where the tick was removed from and swab with alcohol.  The tick should be placed in a glass container with a moistened cotton ball if it is going to be taken for analysis. 

The Ocean County Health Department provides free tick analysis for residents.  To find out more details call 732-341-9700

 


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Lavallette Elementary School
105 Brooklyn Avenue, New Jersey 08735
Phone: 732-793-7722    Fax: 732-830-1604