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Omaha Steve

(109,228 posts)
4. It all started when flu vaccine was given by accident to several students instead of insulin
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 03:02 PM
Jun 2013

Fortunately there were no deaths. And there is a shortage of nurses in CA.

Perhaps a higher standard of training for the person that will be administering the shots would help?

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0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Steve on this one the nurses are wrong nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #1
Yep no insulin can mean death malaise Jun 2013 #3
The wrong dose or type of insulin can quickly cause death. No insulin takes a while. uppityperson Jun 2013 #7
I think schools should have a qualified nurse malaise Jun 2013 #8
911. And as dangerous as Ilsa Jun 2013 #181
you can die either way: hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia magical thyme Jun 2013 #220
Very true. And sometimes the parents Ilsa Jun 2013 #225
A realistic alternative might be Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #10
There are plenty of trained nurses but funding them is another thing. uppityperson Jun 2013 #27
Yeah, you give them the morning insulin & send them to school Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #78
There could be rules that address those things MiniMe Jun 2013 #145
It is not quite that simple. If a kid is sick, their blood sugar levels can change dramatically uppityperson Jun 2013 #189
Depends how high you are. DKA can cause death. Jennicut Jun 2013 #245
It all started when flu vaccine was given by accident to several students instead of insulin Omaha Steve Jun 2013 #4
You know how easy really it is? nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #13
There is no shortage of nurses in CA. There is a shortage of nurses who will work high stress jobs uppityperson Jun 2013 #30
In my last job that's what we were ALL about: a higher standard of training than what is patrice Jun 2013 #68
i won't comment on your personal anecdote, but giving more job duties to lower-paid, less-trained HiPointDem Jun 2013 #87
Perhaps you'll pardon me if I take the words of at least some professionals actually in the field at patrice Jun 2013 #96
i expected nothing else, based on your take on this matter. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #97
You seem to be un-necessarily hostile. I think we agree on the core issues more than you patrice Jun 2013 #99
says the person who wrote: HiPointDem Jun 2013 #157
Well I'm a teacher and I will not give a shot to a kid at school proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #113
Read the suit. nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #119
And what if Mom can't do it? proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #122
What if you don't have a nurse? nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #138
baloney. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #161
You hire a nurse. That's what you do. proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #166
Yeah that's the theory nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #170
Administering insulin and monitoring for reactions is not in the CNA Scope of Practice. uppityperson Jun 2013 #193
Oh, much better to have Mom quit her job then. cprise Jun 2013 #213
So long as no one touches the football budget! Scootaloo Jun 2013 #215
"should a trained, but unlicensed non-medical worker be able to give insulin shots to public school" uppityperson Jun 2013 #125
the suit is about opening it up to be done by non-nurses, not just 'mom'. mom has always HiPointDem Jun 2013 #159
they wanted you to change catheters? That is outrageous. liberal_at_heart Jun 2013 #203
Yep proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #221
That's pure insanity Aerows Jun 2013 #263
No, the other choice is to hire nurses. LWolf Jun 2013 #219
Are the nurses primarily interested in the kids' health or... TreasonousBastard Jun 2013 #2
The Board of Nursing and FarPoint Jun 2013 #21
Exactly. thank you. nt uppityperson Jun 2013 #33
There's no nursing shortage in california. Schools are short of nurses because those positions HiPointDem Jun 2013 #28
If you are so interested in kids' health, you should be interested in having school nurses, rather HiPointDem Jun 2013 #39
Exactly, but it does sound like there is a shortage of wanting to pay for nurses arely staircase Jun 2013 #118
there's never a shortage of capitalists wanting to drive labor into the ground. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #148
agreed arely staircase Jun 2013 #169
I think there should be more school nurses. There should be more... TreasonousBastard Jun 2013 #126
Well, if you can't get a trained medical person, just give it to the office secretary. After all, uppityperson Jun 2013 #128
That's about it. Only nurses should... TreasonousBastard Jun 2013 #208
Having school Nurses is not a ridiculous demand. MattBaggins Jun 2013 #152
Missing the point... TreasonousBastard Jun 2013 #209
i guess they'll have to have mom take a long lunch and take the kid off school property. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #226
Under no circumstance Aerows Jun 2013 #262
Parents give insulin shots all the time. MineralMan Jun 2013 #5
That is like saying someone can be a brain surgeon FarPoint Jun 2013 #48
This ^^^^^^. Sure, just about anyone can give a shot.. likesmountains 52 Jun 2013 #110
And you do not think someone can be trained MineralMan Jun 2013 #111
Yes I do.... FarPoint Jun 2013 #259
You're thinking theoretically, and I'm thinking practically. MineralMan Jun 2013 #261
it's also about having the knowledge well-integrated enough at a deep enough level to do all HiPointDem Jun 2013 #163
But it won't be parents giving the shots to their children... usGovOwesUs3Trillion Jun 2013 #53
No, it will not be a janitor. MineralMan Jun 2013 #112
Such trained people exist now Fumesucker Jun 2013 #116
+1. what they mean is 'train' people to do one tiny subroutine, like a machine, without the HiPointDem Jun 2013 #165
No the teachers are not as qualified as a parent MattBaggins Jun 2013 #160
Parents go through extensive training Ilsa Jun 2013 #180
Last link isn't complete. Thinking back to when I first worked as a nurse, had to have a 2nd one uppityperson Jun 2013 #6
I ordinarily support labor. This time, however, is an exception. Laelth Jun 2013 #9
It is a true shortage Omaha Steve Jun 2013 #11
Schools don't want to hire nurses and its not because of a shortage of nurses, it's because of HiPointDem Jun 2013 #23
Seriously. Liability is a big issue here. Yes, kids need their lifesaving medicine BUT they need it uppityperson Jun 2013 #37
It's a *huge* issue, especially with school budgets already stressed. And it plays right into HiPointDem Jun 2013 #41
Friend of mine was a music teacher in elementary school. Got hrs cut, things added, ended up uppityperson Jun 2013 #45
"IF they raised the nurses wages" is the telling thing. There are plenty of nurses, just few who wil uppityperson Jun 2013 #34
school nurse postions are being cut, entirely defunded. thus we get propaganda articles like HiPointDem Jun 2013 #44
There's no shortage. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #32
There are whole districts that can't afford nurses. Money is the problem. DevonRex Jun 2013 #137
Seems like a third grader could give themselves injections? FarCenter Jun 2013 #12
Third graders under supervision regularly do, in fact nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #16
Figure skating looks easy too... FarPoint Jun 2013 #59
Diabetics are trained to self administer nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #77
I'm not in support of non-medical personnel administering insulin. FarPoint Jun 2013 #82
So you think we should issue a nurse nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #85
your discussion of what's done at home by adults is completely beside the point. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #88
To answer your question... FarPoint Jun 2013 #89
And what someone does at home is different than at school. uppityperson Jun 2013 #90
Alas the suit is not talking of the janitor nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #95
But nadin, you are not a school child but a highly trained Professional. Big difference between what uppityperson Jun 2013 #92
also what you do to yourself & what you do to someone else's children. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #227
Was just thinking this supernova Jun 2013 #18
This is not by any means a bad fight MattBaggins Jun 2013 #164
Technique...yes, it is not difficult... FarPoint Jun 2013 #65
As a type one diabetic myself and the father of a type one diabetic rl6214 Jun 2013 #14
Would you be ok having a school secretary give your kid insulin? uppityperson Jun 2013 #38
It doesn't work that way for many diabetics. Ilsa Jun 2013 #187
I agree and have been saying that throughout this thread. uppityperson Jun 2013 #190
I haven't been able to keep up with Ilsa Jun 2013 #192
The knowledge about the disease FarPoint Jun 2013 #83
As an insulin dependent diabetic.. yes they are MattBaggins Jun 2013 #167
"unlicensed non-medical worker"? 1. What could go wrong? 2. Who could have predicted...? WinkyDink Jun 2013 #15
I Really Can't Support the Nurses on This One. dballance Jun 2013 #17
It is not that simple MattBaggins Jun 2013 #168
the new normal... schools can't afford nurses usGovOwesUs3Trillion Jun 2013 #19
We never had a nurse at school, in the 70's-80's X_Digger Jun 2013 #22
we did. in the 50s. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #25
Perhaps it was the size.. I was in a rural area. X_Digger Jun 2013 #29
No nurse in elementary school FarCenter Jun 2013 #26
"Having start to end of day coverage on every day requires multiple nurses." = how's that? HiPointDem Jun 2013 #42
You need another nurse when the primary nurse is off sick, family emergency, etc. FarCenter Jun 2013 #46
Sort of like teachers, right? Why do we need teachers? uppityperson Jun 2013 #47
You need teachers because it is a school. FarCenter Jun 2013 #50
No you don't. Teacher aids/assistants can do most teaching. Have 1 or 2 licensed teachers on staff uppityperson Jun 2013 #51
If teachers aids/assistants are teaching, then they are teachers FarCenter Jun 2013 #56
No they are not. Teachers are licensed/certified different than TAs are. And times have changed uppityperson Jun 2013 #64
Schools full of children with medical issues. I guess we should bus them to the hospital for HiPointDem Jun 2013 #52
thats when i went to school, and we always had one usGovOwesUs3Trillion Jun 2013 #43
Of course there's a downward trend. That's why propaganda articles like this are necessary, to HiPointDem Jun 2013 #49
yeah, that is what i suspected usGovOwesUs3Trillion Jun 2013 #57
My kids attend a 30,000 student, 35+ campus district with ~10 shared nurses. Xithras Jun 2013 #236
There is no freaking nursing shortage in california. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #20
Thank you. That line is infuriating and wrong indeed. There are plenty of nurses, new grad and exper uppityperson Jun 2013 #40
I stand corrected Omaha Steve Jun 2013 #91
In these times one's first reaction to hearing of labor shortage should be to look for HiPointDem Jun 2013 #98
The article says it was a money shortage. Schools can't afford nurses. DevonRex Jun 2013 #135
Can they better afford Aerows Jun 2013 #265
We're on the same page here. DevonRex Jun 2013 #270
I was giving insulin injections to my grandfather at 14. X_Digger Jun 2013 #24
Isn't "family" a different category? WinkyDink Jun 2013 #31
+1. For one thing, they probably won't sue if you make a mistake. I can't believe the posters HiPointDem Jun 2013 #35
Sure, but the training given to family members takes about an hour tops. X_Digger Jun 2013 #36
Your wife presumably has a particular interest in her own health and access to medical care HiPointDem Jun 2013 #62
There are only two general types of insulin.. X_Digger Jun 2013 #100
You are comparing kids in school to an adult at home. Why do you want to risk kids at school? uppityperson Jun 2013 #101
I'm comparing one adult to the other (other being the person in the school who would be trained.) X_Digger Jun 2013 #103
So you agree having a trained medical professional is good. Not sure what your point is other than uppityperson Jun 2013 #106
Of course it's better. But is the alternative to have *no* insulin absent a nurse? X_Digger Jun 2013 #108
"no 'confounding medical problems' (that affect dosage of fast-acting insulin)" MattBaggins Jun 2013 #175
no, there are not only two types of insulin. You're misinformed. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #194
Okay, a mix of the two, as well. But generally, yes. X_Digger Jun 2013 #198
there are more than 3 types of insulin. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #202
There are"no 'confounding medical problems' (that affect dosage of fast-acting insulin)"? Seriously? uppityperson Jun 2013 #196
Did you even read your own link? X_Digger Jun 2013 #199
If you are a nurse, you should know that illness affects bs levels and hence may need a different uppityperson Jun 2013 #200
Yes, that's true.. but it's the same formula, always (assuming you're still eating.) X_Digger Jun 2013 #204
I will use small words. WHEN a kid gets sick, their blood sugar levels can vary and cause problems. uppityperson Jun 2013 #206
You dose fast-acting insulin based on two things- glucose level and expected meal size. X_Digger Jun 2013 #207
Being sick can may affect the insulin amounts needed. uppityperson Jun 2013 #217
That's the long-acting, not the fast-acting. X_Digger Jun 2013 #223
you have no idea. don't generalize from your own experience. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #228
Yes, I shouldn't generalize from what nursing schools teach. *snort* X_Digger Jun 2013 #230
Not what I was taught in nursing school. Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't. uppityperson Jun 2013 #231
Perhaps you're not reading my post.. X_Digger Jun 2013 #232
"that's the long acting, not the fast acting" uppityperson Jun 2013 #235
Apparently you AREN'T reading X_Digger Jun 2013 #237
"illness may affect blood glucose" and hence insulin is what I have been saying uppityperson Jun 2013 #239
Are you intentionally being obtuse? X_Digger Jun 2013 #240
"the result may change" is what I have been saying. I guess you agree with me but not sure why you uppityperson Jun 2013 #241
says the person who originally said there were only two kinds of insulin. and then said there were HiPointDem Jun 2013 #233
It's simple when it you or just one child in your family MattBaggins Jun 2013 #174
Then Mary gets a glucotab, and a stern look for not eating her PBJ while you wait for mom. X_Digger Jun 2013 #201
Type II versus Type I in a growing child Lars39 Jun 2013 #222
'except in emergencies' elleng Jun 2013 #54
WTF?? RandySF Jun 2013 #55
Are CNAs or CMAs "non-medical"? patrice Jun 2013 #60
They practice under supervision. And yes, from my experience, they're pretty non-medical. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #66
I have heard from some in the field that the whole profession has declined, STARTING with patrice Jun 2013 #75
Neoliberal economic policy & concentration of wealth & power are the root causes. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #76
I agree. If there ever was a field RIPE for worker owned co-operatives, you'd think this would be it patrice Jun 2013 #81
there are such, starting with doctors' practices. but the drivers of cost, wage cuts & HiPointDem Jun 2013 #94
I know dozens of Nurses MattBaggins Jun 2013 #178
The system does teach them basic science. You're just mistaken on that point. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #188
Would you let your kid near your wife? nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #142
Doesn't "if no nurses are available" imply that if nurses ARE available the Obama administration sup patrice Jun 2013 #58
From the OP article....why a "shortage" uppityperson Jun 2013 #63
no, it doesn't. nurses are always available if you care to make it happen. the admin is just HiPointDem Jun 2013 #67
- or - they'd like to see the level of professionalism amongst med techs and such increased, which patrice Jun 2013 #70
There is NO nursing shortage. There are PLENTY of nurses. The only shortage is nurses who do not uppityperson Jun 2013 #71
There is no fucking nursing shortage. A 'med tech' works in a lab. It would be medical assistants HiPointDem Jun 2013 #74
Over-worked nurses with too many patients seem like issues that CNA/CMAs coud help ameliorate if patrice Jun 2013 #79
Nurses aren't overworked because of a CNA shortage, they're overworked because of budget HiPointDem Jun 2013 #80
I didn't intend to imply that. I have stood with nurses' local here & I have administered programs patrice Jun 2013 #86
There's no shortage of nurses *or* cnas. You are arguing for driving down wages & skill levels, HiPointDem Jun 2013 #93
Yes, "driving down" as long as the respective labor organizations are fighting each other instead patrice Jun 2013 #105
nurses have the professional status to administer insulin. CNAs don't. When they do, they will HiPointDem Jun 2013 #205
BULLSHIT. The article says budget cuts forced schools to let nurses go. DevonRex Jun 2013 #131
Telling quotes from OP article and CORRECT LINK uppityperson Jun 2013 #61
I know that the mom likely knows how to give the shots Hayabusa Jun 2013 #69
There is no liability issue because it's not the school doing it Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #130
i've had a lot of needles in me for the last few years. madrchsod Jun 2013 #72
A nurse having a problem finding your vein... Bay Boy Jun 2013 #102
Insulin is not administered into a vein Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #120
Insulin is not going into a vein nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #140
thanks.... i did`t know that. madrchsod Jun 2013 #183
You want to laugh? I used nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #185
Wondering here how the old hates between the AFL-CIO and SEIU, the main organizer for "lower" patrice Jun 2013 #73
On the local and state level everything is fine Omaha Steve Jun 2013 #153
Every school should have a nurse in the fist place. This seems nuts to me, to be limpyhobbler Jun 2013 #84
As a Husband & Father to type one diabetics... Yooperman Jun 2013 #104
Do you think school nurses "just..administer insulin"? uppityperson Jun 2013 #107
Of course not... Yooperman Jun 2013 #109
Yes you do MattBaggins Jun 2013 #179
Did you read my first post... Yooperman Jun 2013 #224
By some of the responses here it appears that anyone who can read a book, likesmountains 52 Jun 2013 #114
Or anyone can replace a college educated nurse. uppityperson Jun 2013 #115
Well, the thing is that 8 and 9 year olds are often taught to administer insulin Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #124
I agree. You need a licensed nurse NOT for boring meh stuff but to prevent things from going wrong & uppityperson Jun 2013 #127
Yeah! Little kids = problems Yo_Mama Jun 2013 #129
No problem. theaocp Jun 2013 #117
+10000 uppityperson Jun 2013 #123
The state will pay one way or another Aerows Jun 2013 #264
I've had over 50,000 insulin shots IDemo Jun 2013 #121
Dad was prescribed one of those, flex pens nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #139
I gave the pens a 90 day trial last year IDemo Jun 2013 #150
Dad's vision was a real issue. He started insulin five years before he passed. nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #156
It's still difficult convincing myself that I need as much or more insulin when sick IDemo Jun 2013 #176
Did the only metmorfin dance nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #186
Do keep in mind that those pens click for each dose MattBaggins Jun 2013 #182
I'd think a blind person would have more trouble with the disposable needles. X_Digger Jun 2013 #212
The American Diabetes Association agrees with the Obama Administration. DevonRex Jun 2013 #132
Then the ADA is wrong, IDemo Jun 2013 #134
The schools can't afford nurses. Period. So now diabetic children can't be educated? DevonRex Jun 2013 #136
'Children' represents a large group IDemo Jun 2013 #162
Can they afford lawsuits? Aerows Jun 2013 #266
Agreed. I think this is maneuvering by DOJ to get CA DevonRex Jun 2013 #268
I was recently on a flight, about 30 minutes in, when the flight attendant asked over the speaker likesmountains 52 Jun 2013 #133
How many diabetic children are there in grade school ? newmember Jun 2013 #141
Technical, but that is part of your answer nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #144
Forgive my ignorance but the woman who wrote the book claims newmember Jun 2013 #146
It's not diabetes we have nurses for nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #147
It's a long time ago but I remember when I went to grade school we had a school nurse. newmember Jun 2013 #151
That is most of what a school nurse does nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #158
In some schools the school nurse is the child's only likesmountains 52 Jun 2013 #172
I made that point somewhere else nadinbrzezinski Jun 2013 #173
about 19/100,000 children have type 1, and about 8/100,000 have type 2. both types can require HiPointDem Jun 2013 #149
So what am I missing here ? maybe I need to read the article again newmember Jun 2013 #155
They have been taking nurses out of schools. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #191
That sounds crazy to me newmember Jun 2013 #210
Data from the 2011 National Diabetes Fact Sheet (released Jan. 26, 2011) uppityperson Jun 2013 #197
Time to look at this as a way to employ more nurses and not to the fact that there are not enough midnight Jun 2013 #143
A teacher's take on this dsc Jun 2013 #154
from this texas teacher arely staircase Jun 2013 #171
Diastat! Yep. And where are these drugs to be kept? Ilsa Jun 2013 #195
At some hospitals, it has been policy that TWO Ilsa Jun 2013 #177
Agree. At my hospital insulin must be checked by 2 RNS likesmountains 52 Jun 2013 #184
Yet another example of downward wage pressure effects in healthcare NoodleyAppendage Jun 2013 #211
Every election we vote to give more money for education abelenkpe Jun 2013 #214
There is plenty of money in CA, we're one of the top 10 economies in the world . Starry Messenger Jun 2013 #216
We used to give our dog Luka allergy shots Omaha Steve Jun 2013 #218
Demonstrates the priority of the Nurses Union... Riftaxe Jun 2013 #229
it's not just about giving the shot. the priorities of the state are clear too. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #234
There is that as well, but many adults Riftaxe Jun 2013 #242
I disagree, and I don't think you grasp all the issues involved. Physically giving a shot of HiPointDem Jun 2013 #246
Well, to take a differ nt opinion Riftaxe Jun 2013 #247
the kid will get his medication if there's a nurse. if you're so concerned about children getting HiPointDem Jun 2013 #248
I would prefer he does get his medication from a nurse Riftaxe Jun 2013 #249
i have no idea what you're talking about. i'm literate in a couple of languages. perhaps i just HiPointDem Jun 2013 #251
Perhaps concentrate on English Riftaxe Jun 2013 #253
ah, yes, english -- mr 'writing things done'. perhaps you'd better concentrate on your own, HiPointDem Jun 2013 #255
you got me, i made a typo, i will now commit seppuku Riftaxe Jun 2013 #256
you called me illiterate, now you act like my pointing out your 'typo' in response is some kind HiPointDem Jun 2013 #257
what are you talking about? my edits weren't to correct grammar or spelling mistakes. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #258
Most people are physically capable of giving a shot. However, there is a whole lot more uppityperson Jun 2013 #238
flexipens regulate the amount well enough Riftaxe Jun 2013 #243
I'm a type 1 diabetic. Giving shots is easy with an insulin pen. I give myself 5 shots a day. Jennicut Jun 2013 #244
you know your own body and your own meds. suggesting that teachers should be HiPointDem Jun 2013 #250
This is why we have physicians Riftaxe Jun 2013 #252
'writing things done' (sic) does not = carrying them out properly and safely. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #254
I do think there should be nurses on staff. But in areas the school district won't pay for them Jennicut Jun 2013 #260
no, you don't. HiPointDem Jun 2013 #269
If a school district can't afford a nurse Aerows Jun 2013 #267
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