Health Services
The Middleton-Cross Plains Area School District Health Services team consists of school nurses, health assistants, and a Health Services Coordinator. Each school has a school nurse and a health assistant to meet students’ daily and chronic healthcare needs.
Our team collaborates with parents/guardians, community providers, and other MCPASD staff to ensure that students are able to be healthy learners in their school communities.
Our MISSION is to provide exemplary, collaborative health care and health education to MCPASD students in order to optimize their health, wellness, safety, and contributions to their school community.
Our VISION: Our Health Services team collaborates with the MCPASD community to promote students’ physical and mental health, safety, wellness, and academic success through compassionate, inclusive, confidential, and evidence-based care.
Help Us Provide The Best Possible Care For Your Child By:
Annually complete the Student Enrollment Form accurately and thoroughly.
Report past and present health information. If your child needs a medication or medical procedure at school, be sure to complete the required paperwork and contact your child's school nurse prior to school starting. School Nurses are back in the District by mid-August.
Providing current phone numbers for work, home and cell so if your child is injured or becomes ill, health offices are easily able to get in contact with you.
Listing other individuals on the enrollment form who may be notified if school staff can't reach you. Inform these individuals that you have listed them as emergency contacts on your child's school enrollment form. Please arrange with them that they are to act on your behalf when you are not available. This includes transporting and caring for your ill or injured child.
School Nurse
The primary role of the School Nurse is to support student learning. School Nurses are a critical link between health and educational communities.
In the school system, School Nurses monitor students with chronic health problems and assist in planning and providing individual accommodations to optimize learning. Students with diabetes, ADHD, asthma, and other chronic conditions require care and case management by a registered nurse.
School nurses also provide specialized care for students who depend on the use of medical equipment and technology during the school day. This includes nebulizers, catheters, feeding tubes, glucose meters, insulin injection, and insulin pumps. Their skill and training cannot be replaced professionally or legally, by teachers, aides, and other staff unless delegated by a School Nurse.
Health Assistant
The primary role of the health assistant is to care for the students’ health needs when they present them to the health office each day. A student’s health needs can range from illness to injury to administering daily medication to insuring that individual health care plans are being implemented.
The health assistant monitors the immunization records making sure each child is compliant with state immunization laws. They support the School Nurse in many ways such as planning for the health needs of students when on field trips, gathering required medical orders, and communicating with staff and parents about a child’s injury, illness, or diagnosis.