Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it is the first time, they will probably get in-school restriction. My neighbor's DD got it for 2 or 3 days for getting caught with Midol by a teacher. This was in a LCPS high school. She also had to complete a drug awareness module online and speak with a counselor there. So dumb.
In the 90's all my classmates knew to come to me for Midol. I'd be expelled if I were in school now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it is the first time, they will probably get in-school restriction. My neighbor's DD got it for 2 or 3 days for getting caught with Midol by a teacher. This was in a LCPS high school. She also had to complete a drug awareness module online and speak with a counselor there. So dumb.
In the 90's all my classmates knew to come to me for Midol. I'd be expelled if I were in school now.
Anonymous wrote:If it is the first time, they will probably get in-school restriction. My neighbor's DD got it for 2 or 3 days for getting caught with Midol by a teacher. This was in a LCPS high school. She also had to complete a drug awareness module online and speak with a counselor there. So dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There should be a medication authorization form linked on your school's website (it may go directly to the PDF on the APS page). Usually your doctor (or someone in the practice) will complete their portion without a visit. Then your child simply navigates to the clinic. Which is all to say, it's not especially hard to comply with the rules as to OTC and RX meds at school. Plus, complying with things like responsible use of ADHD meds sets your student up for success when they move on to college and need to manage their owns meds. If your child is regularly taking a med for some reason that you would hide that fact and the med from school, then that's a big deal and you should address it, whether it's because of something/someone at school, stigma, whatever. If it's that your looking to narc on someone about their student's medicine usage, do a deep dive on what it is, how the student is impacted, how it's your business, is there some other way to address your concerns...
As a teenager I had really intense period cramps. I had to take advil the MINUTE I felt them come on, otherwise they would get too severe and it could take hours for the pain medication to finally catch up. I always had advil in my backpack, in a chapstick that I had hollowed out to be able to smuggle it into school. I learned how to swallow the pills without water because I was so desperate.
Having to get up to go to the clinic multiple times a day, for 3 days in a row, every single month would have been incredibly disruptive. I hated that I was risking expulsion with the same "drug" rules as the kids dealing marijuana when I was just trying to get through the day.
Anonymous wrote:There should be a medication authorization form linked on your school's website (it may go directly to the PDF on the APS page). Usually your doctor (or someone in the practice) will complete their portion without a visit. Then your child simply navigates to the clinic. Which is all to say, it's not especially hard to comply with the rules as to OTC and RX meds at school. Plus, complying with things like responsible use of ADHD meds sets your student up for success when they move on to college and need to manage their owns meds. If your child is regularly taking a med for some reason that you would hide that fact and the med from school, then that's a big deal and you should address it, whether it's because of something/someone at school, stigma, whatever. If it's that your looking to narc on someone about their student's medicine usage, do a deep dive on what it is, how the student is impacted, how it's your business, is there some other way to address your concerns...
Anonymous wrote:There should be a medication authorization form linked on your school's website (it may go directly to the PDF on the APS page). Usually your doctor (or someone in the practice) will complete their portion without a visit. Then your child simply navigates to the clinic. Which is all to say, it's not especially hard to comply with the rules as to OTC and RX meds at school. Plus, complying with things like responsible use of ADHD meds sets your student up for success when they move on to college and need to manage their owns meds. If your child is regularly taking a med for some reason that you would hide that fact and the med from school, then that's a big deal and you should address it, whether it's because of something/someone at school, stigma, whatever. If it's that your looking to narc on someone about their student's medicine usage, do a deep dive on what it is, how the student is impacted, how it's your business, is there some other way to address your concerns...