Terminology I
Programs/Plans
History
Laws/Studies
Terminology II
100
A role of a nurse when mental health support is provided.
What is a counselor?
100
A school health program run by a community health agency.
What is a school-linked program?
100
An act passed in 1990 that mandated that individuals with mental and physical disabilities be brought into the mainstream of American life.
What is the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)?
100
A role of a nurse to investigate phenomena related to health.
What is a researcher?
100
A school staff designated to deal with crises at school.
What is a crisis team?
200
Someone who provides professional advice, services, or information.
What is a consultant?
200
A federal program providing health care, dental care, and mental health care to children and families in schools.
What is school-based health centers (SBHCs)?
200
School-based and school-linked clinics are started during this time. Total family and community health care is offered.
What happened for school nursing in the 1990s?
200
Educational services that must be provided for disabled children from birth through age 22 years.
What is the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)?
200
Procedures to effectively give care in a crisis situation
What is an emergency plan?
300
A school nurse who performs general activities concerning health problems of the children. Builds on the basic functions of the traditional role and adapts new competencies for managing the transition from one part of the system to another or to home.
What is a case manager?
300
Plans to decide educational accommodations for disabled children.
What is individualized education plans (IEPs)?
300
Children with long-term illnesses or disabilities started to attend school.
What happened for school nursing in the 1980s?
300
A federal law requiring services for persons with handicaps.
What is the Rehabilitation Act of 1973?
300
A type of intervention that seeks to promote health and prevent disease from the beginning; involves health promotion and education.
What is primary prevention?
400
A role of a nurse who gives care outside one defined setting.
What is community outreach?
400
Plans to decide the health needs of disabled children in school.
What is individualized health plans (IHPs)?
400
Screening for children in schools for common health problems began.
What happened for school nursing in the 1950s?
400
A federal law requiring education for all children with handicaps.
What is the Education for All Handicapped Children Act?
400
Continued long-term health care. Intervention that begins once the disease is obvious; the aim is to interrupt the course of the disease, reduce the amount of disability that might occur, and begin rehabilitation.
What is tertiary prevention?
500
A role of a nurse giving health care to the ill or injured
What is a direct caregiver?
500
A federal program to provide education to children about safety.
What is Safe Kids Campaign?
500
Henry Street Settlement in New York City sends nurses into schools and homes to investigate the children's overall health.
What happened for school nursing in the 1900s?
500
A federal study of school health programs funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
What is School Health Policies and Programs Study 2006 (SHPPS 2006)?
500
Intervention that seeks to detect disease by screening and providing health care early in its progression (early pathogenesis) before clinical signs and symptoms become apparent in order to make an early diagnosis and begin treatment.
What is secondary prevention?
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