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Allergy Rescue Medication Law Authored by Senator Werk Goes Into Effect July 1


BY COLLEEN LAMAY
From the Idaho Statesman - Edition Date: 07/03/08

Thanks to a change in state law, children in kindergarten and up who have severe allergies can carry an injectable medicine to use at school this fall.

The medicine is available only by prescription. One brand name is Epi-Pen. The medicine, which patients administer themselves, is intended for use in emergencies to treat severe reactions to insect stings, foods, drugs or other substances, according to MedicineNet.com.

The law change, which took effect Tuesday, applies only to the emergency use of an epinephrine auto-injector. It has nothing to do with treatments for other ailments such as diabetes or hyperactivity.

The Boise and Meridian school districts have written policies on schoolchildren's medication.

In Meridian, nurses normally dispense medicine, except asthma inhalers, but kids with special health needs can carry and use medications if they have life-threatening ailments, including allergies.

In Boise, epinephrine auto-injectors have joined asthma inhalers as medications kids can carry with them, said Tamara Fredrickson, health-services supervisor for the Boise School District.

"We had procedures in place where I think kids were kept safe, but I think this can enhance their safety, and there are an increasing number of children with allergies," Fredrickson said.

Nurses will administer other medicine to kids in kindergarten through 9th grade unless the students have permission from the principal, nurse or doctor to keep their medicine with them. Older kids can give themselves medicine with similar permissions.

"Food allergies would be the most common reason to carry (Epi-Pens)," said Dr. G. William Palmer, an allergist with Boise Valley Allergy and Asthma Clinic. Peanut allergies are one common example, he said.

Sen. Elliot Werk, D-Boise, said parents had been encouraging him for several years to help craft a bill for kids who suffer anaphylaxis, a severe, whole-body allergic reaction that causes the airways to tighten and leads to other life-threatening symptoms.

Prompt use of the drug is vital to prevent death.

"If a child is not carrying their Epi-Pen, and there is no school nurse, and you can't get ahold of a person and it's locked in a cabinet, 10 or 15 minutes have gone by, and that's a real problem," said Werk, who has a child with a severe allergy to nuts.

Colleen LaMay: 377-6448

New law: Allergic students can self-inject

From Eye on Boise Blog

Starting on July 1, Idaho law will specifically direct schools to let kids with severe allergies carry self-administered allergy shots like Epi-Pens, under bipartisan legislation that passed unanimously this year. The bill, SB 1443, requires Idaho school boards to adopt policies by Sept. 1 permitting students to carry and use an epinephrine auto-injector for severe allergic reactions, or anaphylactic shock. “It was kind of a situation where there were uneven policies across the state with school districts,” said Sen. Elliot Werk, D-Boise, who co-sponsored the bill with Sen. Joyce Broadsword, R-Sagle, and Rep. Margaret Henbest, D-Boise. “In many instances I think school districts felt like they didn’t want to allow that, because they didn’t want to take on any liability.”

Werk, whose daughter suffers from severe allergies to nuts, said, “My daughter’s actually had to use her Epi-Pen in the past, and it’s miraculous.” The shot is injected into the thigh, and is so simple it can be used right through a pants leg. Werk said Idaho’s school nurses supported the bill, and the Meridian school district has model policies regarding use of the auto-injectors. “You can’t take 15 minutes on exposure to get to somebody to get to somebody that can get you the thing you need,” Werk said. “These things are a matter of minutes.”

Broadsword said the issue has come up around the nation. “It sounded like common-sense legislation to me,” she said.

Posted by Betsy  |  19 Jun 8:21 PM  |