Selinsgrove Area
Intermediate School
Illness

Your child wakes up feeling sick.... should he stay home or go to school?
While you don't want to jump at every
ache, you want to nurse your child back to health if he/she is truly
sick. And of course, you don't want to send a sick child to school.
The
American Academy of
Pediatrics offers three
general guidelines on when to keep kids home from school:
- If the child has a fever.
- He is not well enough to
participate in class.
- You think he may be
contagious
The
Report of the Committee on
Infectious Diseases by the American Academy of Pediatrics in the 1997
Red Book gave these
conditions that should exclude children from a child-care
setting:
- Fever, lethargy, irritability,
persistent crying, difficulty breathing and/or manifestations of
possible severe illness.
- Vomiting two or more times in the
previous 24 hours, unless the vomiting is caused by a
noncommunicable condition and the child is not in danger of
dehydration.
- Diarrhea or stools that contain
blood or mucus.
- Mouth sores associated with
drooling, unless the child's physician says the child is
noninfectious.
- Rash with fever or behavior
change, until a physician has determined the illness not to be a
communicable disease.
- Conjunctivitis (pink eye) with
white or yellow eye discharge, often with matted eyelids after
sleep and eye pain or redness of the eyelids surrounding, until
examined by a physician and approved for readmission, with
treatment.
- Streptococcal pharyngitis (strep
throat), until 24 hours after treatment has been initiated, and
until the child has been
without
fever for 24 hours without
fever-suppressing medication.
State Law on
Excluding Students
Students who have been diagnosed by a
physician or are suspected of having the following diseases should be
kept out of school, according to Pennsylvania law:
- Diphtheria
- Two weeks from onset or until appropriate negative culture
tests.
- Measles
- Four days from the onset
of rash. Pennsylvania also requires that if a documented case of
Rubeola occurs in a School District, all unimmunized students must
be either immunized promptly or excluded from school attendance
for two weeks following the last documented case of Red Measles.
- Mumps
- Nine days from the onset
or until subsidence of swelling.
- Pertussis
(whooping cough) - Four
weeks from the onset or seven days from the instituting
appropriate antimicrobial therapy.
- Rubella
- Four days from rash
onset.
- Chickenpox
- Six days from the last crop of vesicles.( fluid filling skin
lesions of Chickenpox disease)
- Respiratory streptococcal
infections, including scarlet
fever - Not less than
seven days from the onset if no physician in attendance or 24
hours from institution of appropriate antimicrobial therpy.
The School Nurse presumes that if the
child is sent to school, the parent considers him or her to be well
enough to attend, unless obvious symptoms of illness exist (a fever
of 100 F or greater, vomiting, persistent diarrhea, contagious skin lesions,
eye and ear infections, and uncontrollable coughing are some
examples). Following an illness, a student should have a normal
temperature for 24 hours without fever suppressing medications
before returning to school. It is always helpful to call 372-2276, leave a
message, or give the child a note to be presented to the nurse upon
arrival to school when possible symptoms noticed.