Anonymous wrote:But you're a hell of a lot less likely to go through the trouble of having the original packaging with your kid's name and correct dosage and stick some other random med in it, right? Why would you even do that?
What they're attempting to do is make sure your child is taking medication that is properly prescribed and not expired. You sound like a lovely and responsible parent, but let's get real these regulations exist for the lowest common denominator, which exists.
Many schools have communal epipens at this point. I know my school in APS does.
Anonymous wrote:The doctor put all the info on the form. The med, the dose, the diagnosis. So now I bring in a cardboard box. But there is still no way to really prove the item in the box actually came in said box.
Anonymous wrote: But I also think parents should be able to contribute to a fund for a few communal school epipens. It is crazy wasteful and costly, and who has time in a real emergency to sort through 50 epipens and get the one Larla brought in. You need to be able to get it fast. Not sort through 50 for the box with the right name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The doctor put all the info on the form. The med, the dose, the diagnosis. So now I bring in a cardboard box. But there is still no way to really prove the item in the box actually came in said box.
Yes, bring in the box.
It's better for the school to be too cautious about medicine than not cautious enough, right?
Anonymous wrote:The doctor put all the info on the form. The med, the dose, the diagnosis. So now I bring in a cardboard box. But there is still no way to really prove the item in the box actually came in said box.
Anonymous wrote:Did you know that for things like inhalers and even diabetic insulin shots, if you don't have the cardboard box the scrip came in, the nurse's office confiscates the med? Apparently even though the doctor's form provides the details of the med, the dose, the child's name, etc, this info also has to appear on the label (box) and since inhalers don't have labels, the nurse took it from my child.
So calling in yet another scrip from the doc and picking up at the pharmacy so we can have a cardboard box. Yay.