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School Nurse Barriers to Caring for Students with Diabetes at School

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Objective: In this study, we assessed school nurses' perception of barriers to caring for a child with Type 1 diabetes in the school setting. Methods: Four semi-structured focus group interviews were conducted with 29 school nurses from 4 Appalachian locations in Ohio. The researchers used purposeful sampling for the study and invited the participants by an email flyer sent through a state school nurse listserv. The focus groups ranged in size from 5-9 participants in each group and a research guide of 14 open-ended questions was used to guide the interview. The transcripts were transcribed verbatim by a research assistant and independently analyzed by 2 researchers for categories and themes. Results: Emerging themes from the interview data were: (1) nurse workload, (2) need for diabetes training for school nurses, and (3) lack of support from parent/guardians and healthcare providers. Conclusions: Our findings provide direction for school nurse staffing models, policies for diabetes management, and strategies for enhancing relationships between parents and healthcare providers.

Keywords: CHILD & ADOLESCENT HEALTH; DIABETES CARE; SCHOOL FUNDING; SCHOOL HEALTH SERVICES; SCHOOL NURSE

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 October 2020

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  • Health Behavior and Policy Review is a rigorously peer-reviewed scholarly bi-monthly publication that seeks manuscripts on health behavior or policy topics that represent original research, including papers that examine the development, advocacy, implementation, or evaluation of policies around specific health issues. The Review especially welcomes papers that tie together health behavior and policy recommendations. Articles are available through subscription or can be ordered individually from the Health Behavior and Policy Review site.
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