Among the expectations, pressures, and responsibilities placed on school nurses, documentation might be one of the most important, yet tedious, of all. Compliance requirements like those associated with FERPA and HIPAA make proper documentation more complex. And with a mounting mental health crisis in addition to the impact of the pandemic, managing student health along with the data it brings is no easy task.
One additional factor? A shortage of school nurses and mental health professionals.
Retaining your school health professionals is crucial at the precise moment that their jobs have only gotten more difficult and demanding.
What is an EHR system?
The National Association of School Nurses (NASN) describes an electronic health records system (EHR) for school nurses as a “software platform for student electronic health records that includes nursing language/medical terminology and complies with standards of confidentiality, security, and privacy.”
But an EHR system by itself doesn’t automatically mean better care for students, or a better work day for school nurses. Meaningful use (MU) of an EHR is the key differentiator.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services defined meaningful use after the passage of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act in 2009.
What can an EHR system help you do?
When used properly, EHRs have the potential to “maximize quality, decrease cost, and prevent errors, as well as promote the interoperability of school health records with providers in other care settings.”
School nurses might use an EHR for:
- Tracking student health trends
- Ensuring health documentation is secure and compliant
- Managing regular health screenings and immunization tracking
- Administering medication
- Making Medicaid claiming easier for everyone
Secure and compliant documentation is not simply in the district’s interest — interoperable, thorough documentation is critical for excellent student care. That’s in part because students often move between buildings or districts, and many receive care from a diverse array of sources in and outside the district. Family physicians, emergency room doctors, school counselors, psychiatrists, and others need secure access to health data.
An EHR built for schools is a big step toward ensuring your school nurses can do their best work.
How can district administrators utilize EHR data?
School administrators are responsible for so many moving pieces at a school district. They have to report to stakeholders, keep student data safe, and often have to communicate with parents.
Having the right systems in place can go a long way in making a district — and everyone’s day-to-days — run smoother. A solid EHR system should be role-based, allowing administrators to determine what different users in different roles can see to keep staff and student data secure. Ideally, it should help everyone in the district — across different buildings and grade levels — document services in a standardized way.
And while a traditional EHR might not include mental or behavioral health integrated with students’ physical health records, the ongoing student mental health crisis has made it clear that it’s critical to have an understanding of mental health patterns and trends across your student population.
You might not be the person treating a student in the nurse’s office, but implementing an EHR can help you support and retain the staff who need a system designed for their unique documentation, workflows, and reporting needs. And it can make it easier for you to work across departments to understand how health and safety trends are impacting academic performance.
If your school health professionals have asked about an EHR, you might want to consider how an EHR system could benefit everyone in your district: students, school nurses, counselors, administrators, and more.
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What should you look for in an EHR?
If you’re ready to start looking for an EHR, it might feel overwhelming to think about all of the questions you’ll ask potential vendors. Here is a list to get you started.
- Are the software’s workflows designed for school nurses?
- What kinds of reports can we create? Can we track trends by school across the district?
- How does documentation work in the system? Is it intuitive for end users?
- Will we be able to track and report on vaccinations with the software? Can we import staff and student vaccine information from our state’s immunization registry?
- How secure will student data be in this software? Where is student data stored, and who at the company has access to it?
- Does the software allow us to manage prescription inventory and keep controlled substances safe?
- Does the software help us take a holistic approach to student health?
- Can I manage staff certifications with the system?
- How will the EHR integrate with our other, existing software?
- Does the system give us a secure way to communicate with parents?
- Will the system make Medicaid claiming easier?
- Does the system help us maintain FERPA and HIPAA compliance?
- Can the system help me support students’ mental health, too?
- Will the system allow me to monitor compliance with COVID-19 testing, mask mandate exemptions, contact tracing, and other COVID-19 specific needs?
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EHRs vs. SIS health modules
In some ways, comparing a SIS to an EHR is like comparing apples and oranges. Most student information systems are very good at making sure student data is entered in the right format. They’re linear, following students from enrollment to graduation. Completing state and federal reporting each year without a SIS might be unthinkable.
But a SIS is not the standard for health records outside of schools. That means that any health provider outside the district may not have the information they need to properly care for that student. A SIS also falls short on HIPAA and FERPA compliance and doesn’t focus solely on health data, so school nurses might struggle to accurately document services in a way that makes Medicaid reimbursement easy.
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Student mental health in crisis
Mental and behavioral health are crucially important pieces of holistic student health care. Although EHRs are generally designed for physical health documentation, they often have an accompanying mental health module to provide more detailed insights on student wellbeing.
When a school identifies a student’s mental health need, that school is responsible for providing care for that child. At the same time, schools often face resource constraints that make it difficult to hire enough mental health professionals to support the student body.
An EHR’s mental health module can make it easier for fewer mental health professionals to support students at scale. With built-in flags for concerning patterns of behavior, it’s one simple way to help your mental health providers care for students.
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The school nurse shortage
Only 40% of schools have a full-time registered nurse on staff. How does that number relate to EHR systems? While software is not a quick fix, implementing systems that help nurses avoid administrative work can increase job satisfaction.
While you face many challenges in K-12 in any given school year, it seems like the next few years will be especially taxing for school health professionals and administrators. You owe it to yourself to set your team up for success, and an EHR is certainly a step in the right direction.