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The staffroom

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allergy and anaphylaxis training in yr school

10 replies

eragon · 09/08/2014 11:39

just curious, have background working in schools and EY settings and have recently completed and passed a allergywise course with anaphylaxis campaign.

Has your setting had training?

Do you feel confident that you will be able to recognise anaphylaxis and use autoinjectors?

has the whole setting received allergy training?

OP posts:
ComeHeather · 09/08/2014 11:55

Yes annual training for everyone, as standard. Then topped up by each child's allergy nurse so we know what the signs are for that child.

eragon · 09/08/2014 12:25

curriculum wise are you pretty confident with allergic children in the classroom?

OP posts:
ComeHeather · 09/08/2014 12:33

Yes. Plan ahead. Check anything dodgy with parents ahead of time.

It's routine as far as a I know, both to have children with allergies and to know what to do.

trinity0097 · 10/08/2014 07:58

We have annual training by our school nurse on how to stab pupils - sorry use a jext pen or whatever they are calling them nowadays! We all know who is allergic to what, it's on our staffroom board, on our database in the school kitchen etc...

DownByTheRiverside · 10/08/2014 08:40

Yes to all the above, along with any other training to meet specific needs such as diabetes and epilepsy.
Curriculum-wise, you plan with specific children in mind if the activity demands it, and keep in regular contact with parents to ensure that I understand what their allergy means for that particular child. Never assume.

lychee3 · 08/09/2014 01:29

Yes we have annual training at the start of every year on anaphylaxis,allergies, asthma and epilepsy

Littlefish · 13/09/2014 17:56

Same as lychee - annual training for all staff. All TAs are paid to come back/stay after school for the training and lunch time supervisors are trained seperately straight after their lunchtime "shift".

If any teacher is doing cooking/food tasting, they would check all ingredients with relevant parents first.

If I have a child with a particular allergy or intolerance, I ask the parents to provide me some emergency alternatives in case any other child brings in a birthday treat for the class.

spanieleyes · 13/09/2014 20:49

All staff in my school have annual allergy and anaphylaxis training ( and diabetic training too) including lunchtime supervisors, teachers, teaching assistants and office staff. all staff know which children have which allergies and lunchtime supervisors carry photographs of children with known allergies so they can identify them quickly ( as they tend not to know them as well as teaching staff do)

hollie84 · 13/09/2014 21:24

Never had training. When I had a child who had an epipen I had a 5 minute pep talk by my manager (mostly - "the instructions are on the side").

noblegiraffe · 13/09/2014 21:27

I'm secondary and have not had any formal training. I once got shown how to use an epipen when I was going on a residential trip with a kid with a nut allergy, but that was nearly 10 years ago. Nothing since then. Secondary kids are expected to manage their allergies themselves I think.

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