Categories
Nurse Updates

January 13, 2026

BLS Nurse Blog

NATIONAL THANK YOU MONTH

Did you know that January is National Thank You month?

It serves as a dedicated time to express gratitude and kindness to others at the start of the new year.

Some ideas that you can do to spread kindness to others:
* Just say thank you.
* Write a personal note of thanks.
* Reach out via text.
* Acts of service to acknowledge people who make a positive impact
(no matter how big or small.)
* Practice paying it forward.
* Volunteer in the communitySupport a local business.
* Show gratitude by shopping small.
* Leave positive reviews.
* Reconnect with someone.
* Practice daily gratitude – write down three things you are thankful for
each day.
* Give back to nature – pick up some litter, plant a tree. 

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHILDREN’S FUND

The FP Children’s Fund is now managed by the regional FAN office. The church has transferred the funds to the regional FAN office, with a primary focus on providing gas cards to support transportation for medical appointments (e.g., travel to Portland or Seattle for surgery or specialty care).

If you have a student who needs assistance with transportation, please contact your FAN advocate. For other needs, such as clothing, check with your FAN advocate to explore additional resources or ideas for obtaining support.

IMMUNIZATIONS

Immunization Exclusion Day

February 25, 2026

Primary review reports will be submitted to the Deschutes County Health Department tomorrow ( January 14, 2026). Students who are not up to date by that date will receive exclusion letters from the health department, which will be mailed on February 4.

Please reach out to Michelle with any questions.

LOGS

Please remember that we are now using the following (Medicaid friendly) logs for documentation located in the Medicaid Information for Nurses folder in Google Docs. You can only access this with a Bend-La Pine Schools email address (not your personal email).

MEASLES

2 confirmed cases of measles in Linn County

OHA News Release

BLS Measles Response Plan 24-28

NARCAN

If your school recently received any Narcan doses, please send them to Michelle/Tami. We have some schools with upcoming Narcan expirations whose supplies need to be replenished.

Please send any expired doses to Michelle/Tami.

TRANSGENDER SUPPORT

School Nurse Primer on Transgender

NASN School Nurse, 11/2025

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
1/19/26Martin Luther King Jr Day NO SCHOOL
1/21/26Nurse Meeting2-330Caldera
Room 210
1/30/26Nurse Meeting (Skills Day)NEW TIME
845-12
Board Room
Categories
Nurse Updates

January 6, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

“We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.” 一 Winston Churchill

HEALTH SERVICES SUPPORT DURING AFTER SCHOOL-SPONSORED ACTIVITIES

Last month Tami requested the information below be shared in the level leader blogs. Tami will be sharing access to the form responses with our regular nursing staff. Please reach out to Tami directly with any questions. For activities such as Camp Tamarack or other overnight school sponsored field trips, a Request for Direct Care Nursing Form should be submitted by the classroom teacher.

Please ensure that parents/guardians of students who require specialized health services (e.g., diabetes management, seizure support, adrenal insufficiency care) are aware that the school nurse must receive at least two weeks’ notice prior to any school-sponsored activity occurring outside regular school hours (such as dances, movie nights, or robotics events). This advance notice is essential to ensure appropriate health supports can be arranged. For overnight trips, please provide notice a minimum of four weeks in advance to allow adequate planning and coordination. 

Parents/guardians can submit a request here (English/Spanish).

IMMUNIZATIONS

Immunization Exclusion Day

February 25, 2026

Primary review reports will be submitted to the Deschutes County Health Department on January 14, 2026. Students who are not up to date by that date will receive exclusion letters from the health department, which will be mailed on February 4.

Please reach out to Michelle with any questions.

OHA Statement regarding CDC’s January 5, 2026 revised immunization schedule

FYI – At this time there are no changes to Oregon School Immunization Laws

OHA Statement

MENTAL HEALTH

Mental Health Resources

REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH

From OHA

What: OHP members no longer need a personal prescription for birth control pills (specifically Opill) and emergency contraceptive.

Oregon Health Plan (OHP/Medicaid) members are now able to get Opill birth control pills and emergency contraception without a prescription and at no cost at covered pharmacies in the state. The Oregon Health Authority, in collaboration with the Oregon Board of Pharmacy, made this possible through a standing order, which allows pharmacists to provide these medications to OHP members and bill OHP.

In Oregon, these medications are already covered without a prescription for people with private insurance. Federal law, however, requires that all medications for Medicaid enrollees be prescribed by a licensed practitioner who is enrolled in the state’s Medicaid program. Oregon’s new standing order means that OHP members will no longer have to get a prescription to access these contraceptives at no cost.

How OHP member can get access:

  • OHP members can go to their approved pharmacy and request emergency contraception or Opill, and for it to be covered by OHP.
  • Most OHP members get their benefits through a local Coordinated Care Organization (CCO); OHP members can call their CCO and ask which pharmacy to go to.
  • OHP members not in a CCO (known as OHP Open Card), or who do not know which CCO they’re in, can call OHP Client Services for help at 800-273-0557.
  • OHP members will need to provide their OHP ID number, which is on their OHP ID card or CCO ID card, or by providing personal information that enables the pharmacy staff to search for and confirm enrollment in OHP.

Where to learn more:

SAFETY

DCHS Substance Abuse Overdose Response Briefing – 12/19/25

SUBSTANCE USE PREVENTION

From OSNA

Join us on Wednesday, January 7, 2026, for a Substance Use Prevention webinar to learn more about the data and basic epidemiology of alcohol use in adolescents, how alcohol affects the developing brain, and strategies that can be implemented for prevention and screening for problem alcohol use in adolescents.

Because this webinar is being presented by SUD Prevention & Early Intervention ECHO, the registration link is DIFFERENT that the one we usually use for our Community of Practice. This event will be recorded an made available to registrants by SUD Prevention & Early Intervention ECHO.

TIME SHEETS

When submitting timesheets to Kristan, please provide a written or scanned copy only. Photo images should not be submitted, as they are difficult to print clearly. Thank you!

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
1/19/26Martin Luther King Jr Day NO SCHOOL
1/21/26Nurse Meeting2-330TBD
1/30/26Nurse Meeting (Skills Day)NEW TIME
845-12
Board Room
January 9, 2026April 10, 2026
February 6, 2026May 8, 2026
March 6, 2026June 12, 2026

Categories
Nurse Updates

December 16, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

THREE HEARTS

Did you know that an octopus has three hearts????

An octopus has three hearts: two smaller “branchial” hearts pump blood through the gills to oxygenate it, and one larger “systemic” heart circulates that oxygen-rich blood to the rest of the body. This unique system supports their active lifestyle and blue, copper-based blood (hemocyanin), which isn’t as efficient at oxygen transport as red blood, so it needs extra pumping power. ~ Live Science

(And they have 9 brains!!!!!!!!!)

HEPATITIS B VACCINE

Oregon Health Authority continues to recommend hepatitis B vaccination for newborns

OFFICE OF POLICY AND ADVOCACY

From Kinsey Martin

Cell phone/personal device usage:

As we approach the policy shift that prohibits personal devices effective January, please remind teachers to review the IEPs, 504s, and Individual Health Plans of students in their class, and/or check in with Learning Specialists, to be clear on which students have documented permission to use their personal devices.  This info should also be noted in Substitute Folders.  

This will help reduce 1) the number of false claims by students saying they have a medical ‘need’ for their phone, and 2) repeated corrections or consequences for students who do need them but who frequently get reprimanded for usage that is actually permissible.  

Immigration:

Check that you have the ICE guidance (linked and highlighted in this document) printed and posted near your front-entry/reception window for the staff who greet visitors.  This is also a good point to refresh yourself on the procedures expected of you and your team. 

If you become aware of immigration activity in the community that has impacted a student or family, please: 1) be extremely mindful of confidentiality, privacy, and professional boundaries—do not share this information unless absolutely necessary, 2) take care of yourself and your emotions so you can take care of others , 3) refer the student or family to appropriate resources (your family liaison, our newcomer counselor specialist George, school counselor, FAN, etc), 4) let me know if you have a need I can support, resource- or policy-wise.  Thank you for your calm, compassionate, and steady leadership as these tough things continue impacting our community. 

PERTUSSIS

From OHA

Q: What do I need to know about pertussis vaccinations? Do I need an annual booster?

A: People only need one vaccination for pertussis (whooping cough) in a lifetime. The vaccine is called Tdap and it’s a combination of vaccines for tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis.

It’s important to note that while you only need to get the pertussis vaccination once in your life, you will need to boost the tetanus and diphtheria vaccines every 10 years. The boost usually doesn’t include the pertussis vaccine. But if your provider only has Tdap on hand, it’s OK to receive it more than once.

Recommendations for pregnant people and babies

Pregnant people should get a Tdap dose during the early part of their third trimester (weeks 27–36). This protects their newborn in the first few months of life. Spouses, partners, grandparents and any adult routinely in a baby’s life also should get a Tdap dose at least two weeks before the baby is born.

Young infants, even healthy ones, are particularly vulnerable to serious illness or death from pertussis. Once babies turn two months old, they should begin receiving their childhood tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (DTaP) vaccine series. 

Learn more on the Oregon Health Authority Pertussis / Whooping Cough webpage. Read about rising pertussis cases in Oregon in our news release.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
12/22/25-1/2/26Winter Break No School!
1/21/26Nurse Meeting2-330TBD
1/30/26Nurse Meeting (Skills Day)9-12TBD
January 9, 2026April 10, 2026
February 6, 2026May 8, 2026
March 6, 2026June 12, 2026
Categories
Nurse Updates

December 9, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

SMALL POX

Did you know?

December 9, 1979, marks the day scientists declared smallpox eradicated!

Before smallpox was eradicated, it was a serious infectious disease caused by the variola virus. It was contagious—meaning, it spread from one person to another. People who had smallpox had a fever and a distinctive, progressive skin rash.

Most people with smallpox recovered, but about 3 out of every 10 people with the disease died. Many smallpox survivors have permanent scars over large areas of their body, especially their faces. Some are left blind.

Thanks to the success of vaccination, smallpox was eradicated, and no cases of naturally occurring smallpox have happened since 1977. The last natural outbreak of smallpox in the United States occurred in 1949. The World Health Assembly declared smallpox eradicated in 1980. ~ CDC

CELL PHONE POLICY

From Kinsey Martin

If a student has an IEP, 504, or Health Plan that expressly permits a

personal electronic device, then they get to keep it on their body and use it throughout the day—no request/permission form required.  

If their IEP or 504 doesn’t talk about device use/access and they genuinely need it, then their documentation either needs to be amended to include that permission, or they need to follow the request process that everyone else has to follow.

Here is the policy—see item #2 on that doc, and the related footnote #2 as well, which reflects what I described above.  

On the request form, the first check-box option (medical condition, etc) is for students who don’t have device usage already included in their IEP or 504, and won’t have it there because the IEP/504 team

doesn’t deem it necessary.  We anticipate most of those will be “my child has anxiety and needs their music playlist” type of requests that will be denied due to available options on the school iPad.  

You’ll see up at the top of that form that the form states it isn’t required to be completed if they have an IEP or 504 that permits device usage.

CONCUSSION

CBIRT – Center on Brain Injury Research and Training

Taryn E. Townsend,SLPD, CCC-SLP CBIS

What the Pediatric Hospital SLP Wants You to Know

Components of early cognitive-communication and dysphagia assessment in pediatric acquired brain injury within hospital setting

Texas Children’s Hospital approach to interdisciplinary management of pediatric brain injury from ICU to acute care discharge.

PPE SUPPLIES REMAINING

From Gerry Hunt – Distribution

12 cases small gloves

8 boxes large gloves

2 cases hand sanitizer

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
12/10/25Nurse MeetingCANCELLEDCANCELLED
12/22/25-1/2/26Winter Break No School!
January 9, 2026April 10, 2026
February 6, 2026May 8, 2026
March 6, 2026June 12, 2026
Categories
Nurse Updates

December 2, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

NATIONAL COOKIE DAY

Thursday, December 4, 2025 is National Cookie Day!!!

Did you know that Ruth Graves Wakefield invented the chocolate chip cookie in the 1930’s. Thank you Ruth!!!!

LOGO UPDATE

BLS has an updated logo. Oliver is currently updating our forms with the new logo (starting with our medication authorization forms). He will notify us when they have been updated in the NSM.

MENTAL HEALTH

Central Oregon Public Health Monthly Update – 11/28/25

Navigating Loneliness and Grief During the Holidays

What is 211 and How Does it Support Central Oregon’s Tri-County Area?

PPE

Our post-COVID PPE supply is running low, and we are currently out of medium disposable gloves. Prior to COVID, schools were responsible for purchasing their own gloves for general use, and we will be returning to that practice. The remaining PPE items listed below will not be replenished once they are gone.

Current inventory available through Distribution:

  • Small disposable gloves
  • Large disposable gloves
  • Hand sanitizer
  • Disposable masks
  • First Aid Fanny Packs (only 11 left)
  • Disposable yellow gowns

SAFETY

DCHS Substance Abuse Overdose Response Briefing 11/21/25

From Jamie Gunter:

As per our Adi’s Act plan, staff who can risk screen and safety plan with students include school counselors, school psychologists, and student success clinicians. ASIST trained school nurses and student success staff can collaborate with their school based mental health professionals after screening on next steps in safety planning and lethal means calls home. Policy requires that a student is screened and parent/caregivers are notified the same day that a concern is noted. Same day notification to administrators is also a requirement, as is the entry of all screening information and contact details intoStudent Safe. All administrators have access to the Student Safe system, and if anyone would like a 1:1 walkthrough, please reach out.

SPORTS PHYSICALS

Well Child Exams Information

English, Spanish

Feel free to share with students and families.

This information was sent to Gabe Pagano and Level Leaders to put in their weekly blogs.

VISION

Re: VSP Vouchers – NASN

VSP program will be returning. However, no date has been provided. NASN will send out notification once a date has been confirmed.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
12/10/25Nurse Meeting2-330TBD
12/22/25-1/2/26Winter Break No School!
December 5, 2025April 10, 2026
January 9, 2026May 8, 2026
February 6, 2026June 12, 2026
March 6, 2026 
Categories
Nurse Updates

November 18, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

3 DAYS LEFT!!!

COLLEGE AND CAREER DAY

College and Career Day is Thursday, November 20th!

Here are some ways to celebrate:

  • Dress as a professional
  • Wear college colors

HEALTH ALERT NETWORK ADVISORY

Summary: Potential increase in non-fatal overdoses in Bend due to opioids between 11/1/25 and 11/8/25.

Deschutes County Health Services (DCHS) is issuing notification of a potential increase in non-fatal overdoses due to opioids which occurred in Bend between November 1st and November 8th, 2025 (n=11). This does not meet the Deschutes County clinical threshold for an overdose spike. However, due to the atypical severity of the overdoses, DCHS is asking healthcare providers to share information with relevant staff, patients, and clients. DCHS is monitoring data sources and may update the alert as the situation changes.

More information can be found here.

MEDICAID BILLING

A couple of things….

  1. Shout out

We have some nurses with 0 entries! If you need assistance, please reach out to April Diehl. She can come out to your school and provide 1:1 training.

Starting in December, those with 30 or more documented sessions in a month will be entered in a monthly drawing for a prize.

2. Logs

When downloading a blank log, please make sure that:

  • You are using the correct log.
  • The formatting is correct when you download a blank log. (Try downloading in word format rather than pdf.)

IMMUNIZATIONS

From Michelle Spetic

Kindergarten Exclusion

For more information, see Michelle’s email from 11/3/25.

SAFETY

Evacuation Plans

Tami will be reaching out to nurses with 2nd story buildings to ask about what evacuation plans are in place for students with mobility needs. Please be prepared to share what plans are in place at your site.

SKILLS FAIR

Friday, January 30, 2026

9am – 12pm

Location TBD

Please consider contributing to this Planning Document with questions you may have on Visual Acuity Screening, Otoscope use, Tube Feeding and Seizures. There is also a section at the bottom where you can write in any other RN – related topics you would like to learn about at nurse meetings before or after the Skills Fair in January.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
11/24 – 11/28Thanksgiving Break No School
12/10/25Nurse Meeting2-330TBD
December 5, 2025April 10, 2026
January 9, 2026May 8, 2026
February 6, 2026June 12, 2026
March 6, 2026 
Categories
Nurse Updates

November 11, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

1 1/2 WEEKS LEFT

DHS REPORTING

From Eric Powell

Where to send a child abuse report

Moving forward, when documenting a Child Abuse Report that your school is making, will you please store the Child Abuse Form in the following ways:

  1. Building Principal or Department Supervisor maintains a copy of the report
  2. Send (Email is fine) a copy to Eric Powell in Student Services

DIABETES

KINDER IMMUNIZATION EXCLUSION

From Michelle Spetic

Kindergarten Exclusion

For more information, see Michelle’s email from 11/3/25.

OFFICE OF POLICY AND ADVOCACY

From Kinsey Martin

Transgender Awareness Week   

November 13-19 is Transgender Awareness Week.  Next week your building will receive a kit with ideas and supplies for simple ways to support your transgender students or colleagues. *Check with your school’s office manager.

Family Engagement

Family Liaisons: Here are our Spanish-speaking liaisons, and here are reminders on how to use their services.  We also have part-time Black/African American, Asian, and Youth Partnerships Liaisons–if you’d like to connect with one of them, let me know.

FAN AdvocatesHere are reminders on their role.  Remind your staff: FAN does not coordinate Christmas gifts for families and hasn’t for over 10 years.  FAN resources are maxed out prioritizing basic needs (food, utilities, etc).  There are many community-based organizations that do support religious or holiday-based requests like Christmas gifts: Herehere, and here are a few resources.  

Concerns/celebrations: If you have concerns about your liaison or advocate (inconsistent attendance, lack of responsiveness, etc), I need to know right away.  Of course, if you have a note of appreciation or celebration about them, send me those too!

Translation/interpretation: Remember, CAFE members are not your primary resource for language services.  Also, please don’t ask them to “quickly review” your AI/Google-translated communication.  Use Linguist Link for translation/interpretation requests.  Here are reminders on differences between these services.  

Food Access and Your Parent Groups:   -For your review (share as applicable)-

In the absence of SNAP benefits for families in need, some of you have parent groups organizing to gather food and distribute it to families.  This is great, if/when boundaries are respected.  Share these talking points with your parent group, as applicable.  

PAYROLL

From Jessica Houser

Payroll Update

For the November and December payrolls, all employees will receive a paper paystub (or a live check if not enrolled in direct deposit) mailed directly to their home address on file. Payday remains the last business day of each month.

This change ensures every employee can easily access their pay information during school breaks when most staff are off-site or not connected to the district network. From now on, paystubs and paychecks will no longer be routed to school sites for pickup or distribution.

What to Know

  • All employees will automatically receive mailed paystubs in November, December, June, July, and August.
  • Employees who want paper paystubs in additional months can email Payroll to opt in. (This election resets each year.)
  • Employees can update their home address in UKG.
  • Those who need help setting up direct deposit can review the “How To” guide on the Payroll Portal or reach out to Payroll.
  • Substitute and extra-duty employees will continue to receive paper paystubs automatically every month.
  • Employees can still view electronic paystubs through Employee Online when using a district device or network connection.

SKILLS FAIR

Friday, January 30, 2026

9am – 12pm

Location TBD

Please consider contributing to this Planning Document with questions you may have on Visual Acuity Screening, Otoscope use, Tube Feeding and Seizures. There is also a section at the bottom where you can write in any other RN – related topics you would like to learn about at nurse meetings before or after the Skills Fair in January.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
Friday, 11/14OSNA Fall conference8-430Virtual
11/24 – 11/28Thanksgiving Break No School

December 5, 2025April 10, 2026
January 9, 2026May 8, 2026
February 6, 2026June 12, 2026
March 6, 2026 
Categories
Nurse Updates

November 4, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

HB 3007 and OAR 581-021-3007

Administrators from elementary and middles schools have been made aware of HB 3007, Required Procedures for Student Concussion or Other Brain Injury. They are aware of the brain injury team requirements, including the expected team composition.

Please reach out to your school administrators to confirm which staff members have been identified for the brain injury management team.

Once the brain injury management team has been identified, please schedule a meeting with them to review the updated procedures and the ITAP form.

Please reach out to me or Wendy Beall with any questions.

*Tami is scheduled to speak with Katie Legacy regarding high schools on 11/7.

Feel free to pass along to students/families.

The Deschutes County Medical Reserve Corps (DCMRC) is offering free classes to the community. Learn Hands-Only CPR, Stop the Bleed, or both!  Each class is 1-hour and can be scheduled anywhere within Deschutes County.

  • Hands-only CPR (1-hour total): Hands-only CPR is different than certified CPR in that there is no mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and it is only focused on chest compressions. While participants won’t be considered “CPR certified”, the skills they receive from hands-only CPR are indeed lifesaving and can help reduce the number of cardiac deaths.
  • Stop the Bleed (1-hour total): Stop the Bleed is different than traditional first aid as it focuses only on how to stop the bleeding of a wound and pack it until help arrives.  This specific skill is simple to learn and can make all the difference during an emergency.

Please use this link, or the QR code below, to request a class and learn simple, lifesaving skills.

Please feel free to pass along this information to any partners or members of the public you think might be interested.

Information flyer

Reach out to Carissa Heinige ([email protected]) with any questions. 458-292-8347

From Michelle Spetic

For more information, see Michelle’s email from 11/3/25.

Proof of Vaccination or Immunity

Although no measles cases have been detected in Deschutes County yet, we should be prepared in the event that a case comes up in one of our schools.

Individuals who cannot provide proof of measles immunity or vaccination could be excluded from work for up to 21 days – or longer – if an exposure occurs. Because an entire school is considered an exposure site if someone with measles is present, even a single case could significantly impact school operations. In such a situation, schools could face temporary closures or staff shortages until proof of immunity or vaccination is verified.

Having documentation of your MMR vaccination or immunity readily available can help prevent unnecessary work exclusions in the event of an exposure. Now is a good time to review your immunization records. If you don’t have access to them, contact your health care provider to discuss obtaining titers or receiving the MMR vaccine.

Evacuation Plans

Please collaborate with your school Safety Team to review or create an evacuation plan for students with mobility needs (wheelchairs, walkers, etc.) who may access the second floor. Bend Fire has offered to support schools in this planning process. Jason Kamperman is the contact at Bend Fire. [email protected].

Friday, January 30, 2026

9am – 12pm

Location TBD

Please consider contributing to this Planning Document with questions you may have on Visual Acuity Screening, Otoscope use, Tube Feeding and Seizures. There is also a section at the bottom where you can write in any other RN – related topics you would like to learn about at nurse meetings before or after the Skills Fair in January.

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

Wednesday, 11/5Nurse Meeting2-330Ensworth
Tuesday, 11/11Veteren’s Day No School
Friday, 11/14OSNA Fall conference8-430Virtual
11/24 – 11/28Thanksgiving Break No School
 February 6, 2026
 March 6, 2026
November 7, 2025April 10, 2026
December 5, 2025May 8, 2026
January 9, 2026June 12, 2026

Categories
Nurse Updates

October 28, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

NATIONAL CHOCOLATE DAY!!!!!!!

Tuesday, October 28, 2025 is NATIONAL CHOCOLATE DAY!!!

Chocolate comes from the seed of the tropical Theobroma cacao tree, growing in Mexico, Central America, and Northern South America. Historians have documented the earliest cultivation of cacao seeds at around 1100 BC.

In honor of this day, we should all have some chocolate today!!

ASTHMA

Over the Counter Aerosol Bronchodilator

Primatene Mist

Please treat this FDA-approved medication as an over-the-counter product. Recommend that parents/guardians have their child evaluated for asthma by a healthcare provider. Parents or guardians must complete and sign the Authorization for Medication Administration form.

GOALS

REMINDER for REGULAR NURSING STAFF

Your goals are due to Tami by Wednesday, October 29th!

MEDICAID

From Molly:

BLS Nurse Medicaid Workflow

NSM

*Reminder*

Please remember to download a copy of any Google Doc before making edits. Some documents have been translated, so any updates made in English must also be reflected in the translated versions using the BLS translation process.

All communications sent to schools (e.g., lice letters, illness notices) must be approved by Michelle or Tami before distribution.

SKILLS FAIR

Friday, January 30, 2026

9am – 12pm

Location TBD

Please consider contributing to this Planning Document with questions you may have on Visual Acuity Screening, Otoscope use, Tube Feeding and Seizures. There is also a section at the bottom where you can write in any other RN – related topics you would like to learn about at nurse meetings before or after the Skills Fair in January.

TRANSPORTATION

From Michelle Rhoads in Transportation

We’re excited to announce 2025 Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day on November 14. This special event is an opportunity to celebrate Ruby’s courage by walking to school and  is the perfect opportunity to teach students about the Civil Rights Movement and connections to collective efforts for change.

The history of Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day: On November 14, 1960, Ruby Bridges bravely integrated William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans. In May 2018, a group of fifth graders from Martin Elementary School in South San Francisco, California, learned about Ruby and asked their school board to pass a resolution making November 14 Ruby Bridges Day. This day honors Ruby’s historic role in advancing civil rights and serves as a reminder of the importance of equality, justice, and education for all children. Communities across the country participate in this event to recognize Ruby’s courage and to inspire future generations to continue her legacy. Here is a video about Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day. Here is a link to the Ruby Bridges Foundation.

For information on how to participate in this event, please contact Michelle Rhoads, Bend – La Pine Schools Active Transportation Coordinator, [email protected] , phone 541-355-5721.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
Wednesday, 10/29No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Thursday, 10/30No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Friday, 10/31No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Wednesday, 11/5Nurse Meeting2-330Ensworth
Tuesday, 11/11Veteren’s Day No School
Friday, 11/14OSNA Fall conference8-430Virtual
11/24 – 11/28Thanksgiving Break No School
 February 6, 2026
 March 6, 2026
November 7, 2025April 10, 2026
December 5, 2025May 8, 2026
January 9, 2026June 12, 2026
Categories
Nurse Updates

October 21, 2025

BLS Nurse Blog

WORLD KANGAROO DAY

October 24, 2025 is World Kangaroo Day!!!

This day is to help raise awareness for the conservation of kangaroos.

Here are a couple of fun facts about kangaroos:

  • Kangaroos are good swimmers and will use water to escape predators or cross rivers.
  • Kangaroos cannot walk backward because of their large feet and tail.

CARDIOLOGY

Dr. Tajchman is in the house!!!

Dr. Tajchman will be coming to our next nurse meeting on Wednesday, November 5th. Please submit any questions/topics you would like for her to address here.

MEASLES

Update from Deschutes County

Health Alert Network

Measles found from a waste water treatment plant in Marion County. More information can be found here.

You can view the BLS Measles Response Plan here.

OFFICE OF POLICY AND ADVOCACY

From Kinsey Martin

Family Engagement Calendar

We now have an Outlook calendar to communicate and coordinate district-wide family engagement events and key dates!  It includes district-wide events where families are the audience, such as Financial Aid night or Latino Family Night, as well as the “do not schedule” dates for religious observances.  

This is a staff-facing tool, for awareness, access, and coordination of school, district, and program-specific family events.  Please work with your office staff to add this calendar to your school Outlook calendar—instructions here

SAFETY

DCHS Substance Abuse Overdose Response Briefing 10-17-25

_______________________

Suicide risk and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI)

From Sean Reinhart, Jennifer Hauth, and Jamie Gunter

The Student Services Team is reaching out with a yearly reminder of protocols and procedures around suicide risk and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), as required by Adi’s Act (Senate Bill 52).  We will be providing a series of updates to ensure that administrators are informed on updated protocols. 

Reminder: Postvention

Please review the updated protocols in the BLS Sudden Death Response Procedures For Building Admin & Staff. We will review this information at the December 3, 2025, Safety Cadre. 

  • View the updated sudden death response procedures.
  • Review with all of your building staff on these procedures.
    • Ask all staff to contact their building administrator if they become aware of any information on the death of a staff member, student, or parent in your school community. 
  • If a Staff member reaches out to an administrator:
    • Thank the reporter and ask that they don’t contact other individuals and share the news they have heard. Oftentimes the information is inaccurate or incomplete and unknowingly propagating rumors can cause harm.
    • The building administrator reaches out to Sean, Jennifer, Scott, or their Level Leader (in that order until the first person is reached).
    • Student Services will walk you through next steps. 

Best-practice postvention around notification helps to prevent further harm or contagion, ensures accuracy and consistency, protects and respects the family, supports emotional safety, and lays the foundation for healing and recovery. If you have questions or concerns around this process, please reach out.

SKILLS FAIR

Friday, January 30, 2026

9am – 12pm

Location TBD

Please consider contributing to this Planning Document with questions you may have on Visual Acuity Screening, Otoscope use, Tube Feeding and Seizures. There is also a section at the bottom where you can write in any other RN – related topics you would like to learn about at nurse meetings before or after the Skills Fair in January.

DATES TO REMEMBER

Upcoming Nurse Events/Meetings

DATEEVENTTIMELOCATION
Wednesday, 10/29No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Thursday, 10/30No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Friday, 10/31No school elem/middle This is a required work day for regular staff.
Wednesday, 11/5Nurse Meeting2-330Ensworth

 February 6, 2026
 March 6, 2026
November 7, 2025April 10, 2026
December 5, 2025May 8, 2026
January 9, 2026June 12, 2026

$$$$$ When is pay day???? $$$$$

 February 27, 2026
October 31, 2025March 31, 2026
November 28, 2025April 30, 2026
December 31, 2025May 29, 2026
January 30, 2026June 30 , 2026