THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
Full
Board
|
FROM: |
James A.
Kadamus |
SUBJECT: |
Proposed Amendment to
Regulations of the Commissioner Relating to School Health
Services |
DATE: |
June 29,
2005 |
STRATEGIC GOAL: |
Goals 1 and
2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Summary
Issue for Decision
Should the Regents adopt the proposed amendment of sections 136.1, 136.2
and 136.3, which implements and otherwise conforms the Commissioner's
Regulations to Chapter 477 of the Laws of 2004?
Reason for Consideration
Required by State statute.
Proposed Handling
The proposed amendment is before the Committee for
discussion in July and will be submitted for action at the September
meeting.
Procedural History
N/A
Chapter 477 of the Laws of 2004 amended and repealed
certain sections in Education Law Article 19, regarding the provision of school
health services in New York State schools, to extend the period of time in which
students may obtain physical examinations and health certificates for schools in
order to facilitate and provide flexibility of scheduling for pediatricians and
parents, and to update the terminology and standards to be consistent with
current medical and health care practice.
Consistent with Chapter 477, the proposed amendment
extends from 90 days to 12 months, the period of time in which health
certificates may be presented by students to public schools after a health
examination; specifies the school grades in which certificates must be
presented; adds physician assistant and nurse practitioner to the list of
persons who may sign a health certificate; and provides that each student
furnish a health certificate within 30 days of the student's entrance into the
school or a grade in which a health certificate is required. Pursuant to Education Law section
903(1), as amended by Chapter 477, the proposed amendment also requires, in all
school districts, that the physician, physician assistant or nurse practitioner
administering the examination for a health certificate conduct, if determined
necessary, a one-time test for sickle cell anemia and include the test results
in the health certificate. The
proposed amendment also requires students to provide proof of immunization
against specified diseases; specifies when school districts must conduct
screening examinations of students for scoliosis, vision and hearing; and
provides for an examination by the director of school health services of
students who fail to furnish a health certificate when required. Consistent with the Chapter 477, an
accommodation is provided for persons who object to health examinations, health
histories, health screenings and immunizations on the basis of a genuine and
sincere religious belief. The
proposed amendment also adds definitions and otherwise updates terminology to
reflect changes made by Chapter 477.
Section 901 of the Education Law exempts the New York City, Buffalo and
Rochester school districts from these requirements because school health
services were being provided by the local city and/or county health
departments. Currently, the
Legislature has enacted bills to remove the exemption for Buffalo and Rochester,
but they have not as yet been signed by the Governor.
A Notice of Proposed Rule Making will be published in
the State Register on July 13, 2005.
Recommendation
The Board of Regents should discuss the proposed
amendment in July and take action in September.
Timetable for Implementation
The proposed amendment is necessary to implement and otherwise conform
the Commissioner's Regulations to Chapter 477 of the Laws of 2004, which will
become effective on September 1, 2005.
AMENDMENT TO THE
REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to
Education Law sections 207, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 911, 913 and 914 and
Chapter 477 of the Laws of 2004
1. Section 136.1 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is amended, effective September 29, 2005, as
follows:
§ 136.1
Definitions.
Definitions as
used in this Part:
[ (a)
Satisfactory, appropriate, approved, acceptable, adequate, equivalent,
essential, sufficient, suitable, means satisfactory, appropriate, approved,
acceptable, adequate, equivalent, essential, sufficient, suitable, respectively,
in the judgment of the commissioner. ]
[(b)] (a)
School personnel means persons employed by school authorities in conducting the
schools.
[ (c) Health
service personnel means the school physician, school nurse-teacher, dental
hygiene teacher and other professional persons employed by the school to render
health services. ]
(b) Health professionals means persons duly
licensed or otherwise authorized to
practice a health profession
pursuant to applicable law, including, but not limited to, physicians,
registered professional nurses, nurse practitioners, physicians assistants,
optometrists, dentists, dental hygienists, dietitians and nutritionists, and
audiologists.
(c) School
nurse means a
registered professional
nurse.
(d) Director of school health services means
a qualified physician, or a nurse practitioner to the extent authorized by
Article 139 of the Education Law and consistent with the written practice
agreement pursuant to Education Law section 6902(3), who is duly licensed
pursuant to applicable law, and who is employed by the school district to
perform any duties conferred on the school physician or school medical inspector
under any provision of law, to perform and coordinate the provision of health
services in the public schools, and to provide health appraisals of students
attending the public schools in the city or district.
[ (d) Health
service means the several procedures (annual medical examinations, dental
inspection and/or screening, vision screening and audiometer tests) designed to
determine the health status of the child; to inform parents, pupils and teachers
of the individual child's health condition; to guide parents, children and
teachers in procedures for preventing and correcting defects and diseases; to
instruct the school personnel in procedures to take in case of accident or
illness; to survey and make necessary recommendations concerning the health and
safety aspects of the school plant and the hygiene of instruction. ]
(e) School
health services shall mean the several procedures, including, but not limited
to, medical examinations, dental inspection and/or screening, scoliosis
screening, vision screening and audiometer tests, designed to determine the
health status of the student; to inform parents or other persons in parental
relation to the student, pupils and teachers of the individual student's health
condition subject to federal and state confidentiality laws; to guide parents,
students and teachers in procedures for preventing and correcting defects and
diseases; to instruct the school personnel in procedures to take in case of
accident or illness; to survey and make necessary recommendations concerning the
health and safety aspects of school facilities and the provision of health
information.
[ (e) ]
(f) Treatment means correction of physical defects or other [impairments]
health problems in need of attention wherein the [child] student,
for the most part, is a passive recipient.
[ (f) Dental
inspection means using a mouth mirror and dental explorer under adequate
illumination.
(g) Dental
screening means examination of the teeth by using a tongue depressor and
available illumination.
(h)Scoliosis
screening means examination of the uncovered spine including the cervical,
thoracic, lumbar and thoraco-lumbar segments by viewing from the front, back and
sides under adequate illumination and observing the existing range of motion of
the spine in all directions. ]
(g)
Commencement of the school year shall mean the first day of the school year in
which students are in attendance.
(h) Thirty
days or ninety days shall mean, respectively, 30 calendar days or 90 calendar
days.
2. Section 136.2 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is amended, effective September 29, 2005, as
follows:
§ 136.2 General
regulations.
(a) All schools
under the jurisdiction of the State Education Department shall provide a program
of health [service] services.
(b) [Medical
inspection] School health services shall be provided by each school
district for all [pupils] students attending the public schools in
this State, except in the city school districts of the cities of New
York, Buffalo and Rochester, in accordance with law and the regulations.
[Medical inspection] School health services shall include the services of
a [trained] registered professional nurse, if one is employed, and shall
also include such services as may be rendered as provided herein in examining
[pupils] students for the existence of disease or [physical defects]
disability and in testing the eyes and ears of such [pupils]
students.
(c) The trustees
or board of education of each school district shall employ, at a compensation to
be agreed upon by the parties, a [competent physician as a medical inspector, to
make inspections of pupils attending the public schools in the city or district]
director of school health services.
(d) It shall be
the duty of trustees and [board] boards of education:
(1) to provide
approved and adequate personnel and facilities;
(2) to maintain
for each [child] student cumulative records covering the essential
features of the health [service] services program; and
(3) to make
such reports to the department as may be required on forms
prescribed by the commissioner.
3. Section 136.3 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is repealed and a new section 136.3 is added,
effective September 29, 2005,as follows:
§ 136.3 School health services.
(a) General
duties of trustees and boards of education. It shall be the duty of trustees and
boards of education:
(1) to provide and maintain a
continuous program of school health services in accordance with this section;
(2) to advise, in writing, the parent or
guardian of each student in whom any aspect of the total school health program
indicates a defect, disability or other condition which may require professional
attention with regard to health;
(3) to provide, where the exigencies
warrant, relief in situations where the student would otherwise be deprived of
the full benefit of education through inability to follow the instruction
offered;
(4) to maintain a program of education for
the purpose of informing the school personnel, parents, non-school health
agencies, welfare agencies and the general public regarding school health
conditions, services and factors relating to the health of
students;
(5) to provide for guidance to parents,
students and teachers in procedures for preventing and correcting defects and
diseases and in the general improvement of the health of students;
(6) to furnish instruction to school
personnel in procedures to follow in case of accident or illness;
(7) to provide inspections and supervision
of the health and safety aspects of the school plant;
(8) to provide health examinations before
participation in strenuous physical activity and periodically throughout the
season as necessary; and
(9) to provide health examinations necessary
for the issuance of employment certificates, vacation work permits, newspaper
carrier certificates and street trades badges.
(b)
Examination and health history.
(1) Except in the city school districts of
the cities of New York, Buffalo and Rochester, it shall be the duty of the
trustees and boards of education to
require each student enrolled in the public school to have a satisfactory health
examination conducted by the student's family physician, physician assistant or
nurse practitioner, upon the student's entrance in such school at any grade
level and for each student entering pre-kindergarten or kindergarten and in the
2nd, 4th, 7th and 10th grades. Such
examination shall be acceptable for purposes of this section if it is
administered not more than twelve months prior to the commencement of the school
year in which the examination is required.
(2) An examination and health history of any
student may be required by local school authorities at any time in their
discretion to promote the educational interests of such
student.
(3) In all school districts, the physician,
physician assistant or nurse practitioner administering such examination shall
determine whether a one-time test for sickle cell anemia is necessary or
desirable and, if so determined, shall conduct such test and include the results
in the health certificate prepared in accordance with subdivision (c) of this
section, provided that nothing herein shall be deemed to require that a student
be tested more than once during the period the student is eligible to attend a
public school.
(c) Health certificates and proof of
immunization.
(1) Health certificates. It shall be the duty of the trustees and
boards of education to require that each student, within thirty days after his
or her entrance into school or within thirty days after his or her entry into
the 2nd, 4th, 7th and 10th grades, submit to the principal or the principal's
designee a health certificate that meets the requirements of this paragraph,
provided that no health certificate shall be required of a student for which an
accommodation for religious beliefs is made pursuant to subdivision (f) of this
section.
(i) The health certificate
shall:
(a) be
signed by a duly licensed physician, physician assistant, or nurse practitioner,
who is:
(1)
authorized by law to practice in this State, and consistent with any applicable
written practice agreement; or
(2) authorized to practice in the
jurisdiction in which the examination was given, provided that the commissioner
has determined that such jurisdiction has standards of licensure and practice
comparable to those of New York;
(b) describe the condition of the student
when the examination prescribed in subdivision (b) of this section was made,
which examination shall not have
been given more than twelve months prior to the commencement of the school year
in which the examination is required;
(c) state the results of any test conducted
on the student for sickle cell anemia pursuant to this section; and
(d) state
whether such student is in a fit condition of health to permit his or her
attendance at the public schools and, where applicable, whether the student has
defective sight or hearing, or any other physical disability which may tend to
prevent the student from receiving the full benefit of school work or from
receiving the best educational results, or which may require a modification of
such work to prevent injury to the student.
(ii) The health certificate shall be filed in
the student's cumulative record.
(iii) The principal or the principal's
designee shall send a notice to the parents of, or person in parental
relationship to, any student who does not present a health certificate, unless
he or she has been accommodated on grounds of religious beliefs pursuant to
subdivision (f) of this section, that if the required health certificate is not
furnished within thirty days from the date of such notice, an examination by
health appraisal will be made of such student by the director of school health
services pursuant to subdivision (d) of this section.
(2) Immunizations, It shall be the duty of the trustees and
boards of education to require that every student entering or attending school
provide proof of immunization against poliomyelitis, mumps, measles, diphtheria,
rubella, varicella, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and hepatitis B in
accordance with the provisions of Public Health Law section
2164.
(d) Examinations by health appraisal.
(1) Each principal or principal's designee
shall report to the director of school health services having jurisdiction over
such school, the names of all students who are required to and have not
furnished health certificates pursuant to subdivision (c) of this section, or
who are students with disabilities.
(2) The director of school health services
shall cause such students to be separately and carefully examined and tested to
ascertain whether any such student has defective sight or hearing, or any other
physical disability which may tend to prevent the student from receiving the
full benefit of school work or from receiving the best educational results, or
which may require a modification of such work to prevent injury to the
student.
(3) In all school districts, the physician,
physician assistant or nurse practitioner administering such examination shall
determine whether a one-time test for sickle cell anemia is necessary or
desirable and, if so determined, shall conduct such test and include the results
in the health certificate prepared in accordance with subdivision (c) of this
section, provided that nothing herein shall be deemed to require that a student
be tested more than once during the period the student is eligible to attend a
public school.
(4) If it should be ascertained, upon such
test or examination, that any students have defective sight or hearing, or other
physical disability, including sickle cell anemia, the principal or principal's
designee shall notify the student's parents or persons in parental relation as
to the existence of such disability.
If the parents or persons in parental relation are unable or unwilling to
provide the necessary relief and treatment for such students, such fact shall be
reported by the principal or principal's designee to the director of school
health services, whose duty it shall be to provide relief for such
students.
(e) Health screenings.
(1) It shall be the duty of trustees and
boards of education to provide:
(i) scoliosis screening at least once each
school year for all students in grades 5 through 9. Such screening shall include the
examination of the uncovered spine including the cervical, thoracic, lumbar and
thoraco-lumbar segments by viewing from the front, back and sides under adequate
illumination and observing the existing range of motion of the spine in all
directions. Such screening shall be provided by persons with appropriate
training, including, but not limited to, the school nurse, the school nurse
teacher, the nurse practitioner, the physician assistant, or the school
physician. The positive results of
any such screening examinations for the presence of scoliosis shall be in
writing and the parent of, or person in parental relation to, any student in
whom the presence of scoliosis is found shall be advised of such results by the
school authorities within ninety days after such finding. The requirements of this subparagraph
relating to examination for scoliosis may be waived by the commissioner upon the
filing with the commissioner of a resolution, duly adopted by a board of
education following a public hearing on such proposed resolution, stating that
the school district does not have the capability to comply with this
subparagraph relative to the examination for scoliosis and that such compliance
would place a financial burden upon the school district. The district shall provide, in addition
to the resolution, the date of the public hearing, a report of the findings from
the hearing. The resolution shall
be filed no later than October 1st of each school year. A waiver of this requirement by the
commissioner shall be valid for one school year;
(ii) vision screening to all students who
enroll in a school of this state including at a minimum color perception,
distance acuity, near vision and hyperopia within six months of
admission to the school; in
addition, all students shall be screened for distance acuity in grades
Kindergarten, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 and 10 and at any other time deemed necessary; the
results of all such vision screening examinations shall be in writing and shall
be provided to the pupil's parent or person in parental relation and to any
teacher of the pupil within the school while the pupil is enrolled in the
school, and shall be kept in a permanent file of the school for at least as long
as the minimum retention period for such records, as prescribed by the
commissioner pursuant to Article 57-A of the Arts and Cultural Affairs Law;
(iii) hearing screening to all students within
six months of admission to the school and in grades Kindergarten, 1, 3, 5, 7
and10, and at any other time deemed
necessary; such screening shall include, but not be limited to, pure tone and
threshold air conduction screening; the results of any such hearing tests shall
be in writing and shall be provided to the pupil's parent or person in parental
relation and to any teacher of the pupil within the school while the pupil is
enrolled in the school.
(2) The results of all health screenings (dental, hearing, vision and
scoliosis) shall be recorded on appropriate forms which shall be kept on file in
the school. The trustees or board
of education shall ensure that the health professional making the examination
shall sign the cumulative health record and make appropriate
recommendations;
(f) Accommodation for religious
beliefs. Notwithstanding the
provisions of this section, no health examinations, health history, examinations
for health appraisal, immunizations, screening examinations for sickle cell
anemia and/or other health screenings shall be required where a student or the
parent or person in parental relation to such student objects thereto on the
grounds that such examinations, health history, immunizations and/or screenings
conflict with their genuine and sincere religious beliefs. A written and signed statement from the
student or the student's parent or person in parental relation that such person
holds such beliefs shall be submitted to the principal or the principal's
designee and shall be deemed to constitute sufficient proof of such
beliefs.
(g) Student health records. The health records of individual
students shall be kept confidential in accordance with the federal Family
Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) and any other applicable federal and
State laws.
(h) Exclusion from school of student with
communicable disease. Whenever,
upon investigation and evaluation by the director of school health services, the
school nurse or other health professionals acting upon direction or referral of
such director for care and treatment, a student in the public schools shows
symptoms of any communicable or infectious disease reportable under the Public
Health Law that imposes a significant risk of infection of others in the school,
he or she shall be excluded from the school and sent home immediately, in a safe
and proper conveyance. The director
of school health services may examine any student returning to school following
an absence due to illness or unknown cause, who is without a certificate from a
local public health officer, a duly licensed physician, physician assistant or a
nurse practitioner, to determine that such student does not pose a threat to the
school community,
(i) Health examination of employees and
school premises. To protect
students and staff from communicable diseases, the director of school health
services or other health professionals acting upon direction or referral of such
director, may make such evaluations of teachers and any other school employees,
school buildings and premises as, in their discretion, they may deem
necessary.
(j) Condom Availability. Boards of education or trustees that
elect to make condoms available to pupils as part of its program of school
health services shall assure that adequate personal health guidance is provided
to each pupil receiving condoms in the manner prescribed by section
135.3(c)(2)(ii) of this Title.