I was really trying to refrain from making any comments on this thread, after reading all of it. However, just like others, I just can't resist the lure of the train wreck.
No, I am not. I even said multiple times that the Paramedic would most likely be more educated in dealing with those types of illnesses, but when it comes to the day-to-day patient education and the understanding of fundamental education is where Paramedics lack and so do RN's, until the certificate is awarded. You haven't read the thread obviously.
And how to you arrive at the conclusion that paramedics are uneducated in "day-to-day patient education"? I call tell you there is rarely a shift that goes by where I don't educate at least one patient about something, whether it is answering questions about a chronic illness, a medication, specific acute episodes, or what have you.
You keep dragging back up this all important certificate, that the nurse must have to be a school nurse. For sake of argument, let's pretend the department of education (or whichever government agency it was in your state that dictated it) removed the requirement of a BSN to take this all-important certification, and anyone with medical training, no matter how little, could take this class, challenge the test, and receive the holy certificate. How then is the nurse any more knowledgeable in the "specialty" of school health care provider?
Here, your making assumptions. Do you really know most of EMS ? No, you do not. So for you to make generalized statements as such aren't truly conceivable, I will agree that teaching it is not a skill that is difficult. But again, the School Nurse has more training and experience with such documentation. I never once said a Paramedic couldn't be a school health provider, they would just need the correct certification to do so and not take the title "nurse."
Since when is teaching a skill that isn't difficult? Wait, let me add a qualifier to that, and make it "good at teaching." Heaven knows there are countless people out there, even those with a Bachelors or Masters in Education, that are far from "good at teaching." A couple prereq classes while in college do not make a nurse (or a medic for that matter) a good instructor. Just because someone can teach, doesn't mean they should.
And what documentation is it, exactly, that the nurse has more training and experience with? If you are talking documentation in general, both medics and nurses are required to do plenty of documentation. If you are referring to job related documents, then of course the person working within that specific capacity is going to have more knowledge and experience. Anyone who isn't employed by the school will not be familiar with the paperwork the health care provider needs to complete. I would be willing to bet that there are even some variations from one school district to another.
This is true, but do they teach in a specialized environment such as schools and are trained to do so and even required to pass an exam on such subjects ? No, they do not. They certainly could, but I know very few Paramedics who would be comfortable with such situations, it simply isn't in their specialty to make public speeches on such topics. Not saying it isn't possible, but further education must be pursued.
Making public speeches isn't part of the job for most nurses either. And, who said you have to be educated to be a good public speaker? Some people are just a natural at giving speeches. That being said, giving a public speech isn't the same thing as educating a group of people. A speech is typically one sided. The speaker says what they have to say, and there may or may not be an opportunity to address him or her regarding various points of the speech. When you are educating a group of people, there is typically some sort of interaction going on between teacher and students. And again, not everyone is a good teacher.
There were several other points I read that I thought about addressing, but I wouldn't really be saying anything that hasn't already been said. Because of that, I thought I would just jump in on the most recent ones.
As for the issue of people claiming to be nurses when they aren't, yes it is wrong. But so is claiming to be a police officer, janitor, hobo, or anything else that you are not. However, how often is the person in the position of "school nurse" claiming to have that title, and how often is it other people just using it as a generic title for a specific set of job requirements?