With schools planning on blending in-person and remote teaching models when they reopen in August, the Hawaii Department of Education will also be relying on a new health hotline and telehealth services to serve families and students outside of the school setting.
The resources and nurse staffing coverage are already built in. The free services are a continuation of an existing DOE partnership with the University of Hawaii Manoa School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene called .
But what鈥檚 new is a technological framework to support remote health care services 鈥 such as a nursing triage software to perform a basic assessment of health concerns, followed by a telehealth visit with a Hawaii Keiki nurse.
“Hawaii Keiki was already working on establishing a telehealth program. But this pandemic allowed them to work at lightning speed and get the telehealth program up and running for the summer,” said Heidi Armstrong, assistant superintendent for the DOE Office of Student Support Services.
Just because school is officially out for the summer doesn鈥檛 mean the service has gone dark. There is a available until July 24, staffed Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Deborah Mattheus, senior practice director of Hawaii Keiki and associate professor at the UH School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene, said that during the pandemic, not everyone has been able to have access to their family care provider.
The hotline “provided that means for families to connect to someone they recognize and trust 鈥 a nurse 鈥 and get those questions answered,鈥 she said.
Not Just Health-Related Calls
When the new school year starts Aug. 4, the DOE health hotline will operate Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Some school-based health centers may return to an on-site office while others may offer a hybrid in-person model combined with the remote option.
The Hawaii Keiki program launched in 2014 as a pilot program, placing nurses with advanced training in five school complex areas. It’s since expanded, boosted by $2.8 million in legislative funding, with 13 APRNs and six registered nurses now stationed throughout the DOE school complex areas.
There are currently 19 primary Hawaii Keiki sites throughout the state, according to the DOE.
The Hawaii Keiki program was viewed as one strategy to help lower chronic absenteeism, particularly in schools in remote or rural locations where visiting a doctor meant a child having to miss school for an entire day or two.
In the 2018-19 school year, of health room visits across Hawaii public schools related to student injury or illness. Of those 9,021 health room visits across the state, most students, or 86%, were able to return to class afterward.
But that will likely change in the upcoming school year, as more remote learning is incorporated into the curriculum.
More Mental Health Concerns Expected
As of May 1, 85 calls have been placed to the new health hotline. Calls have come in from all over the state, from Oahu to the Big Island to Maui.
And the concerns communicated over the phone don鈥檛 always relate to a health ailment.
Some parents want to know about the safety protocols surrounding the reopening of schools for summer programs. Others want to know about the DOE grab-and-go meals program, or immunizations needed for the upcoming school year. Other calls have come from outside the state, with families planning to relocate to Hawaii asking questions about the school transition process, said Mattheus.
鈥淎s we were going through this period of COVID, there are not as many sick kids,鈥 she noted. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not in school, they鈥檙e social distancing. Not as many sick calls. There will be more the closer we get to opening schools.鈥
Another huge part of the service has been the ability to provide initial support to students for mental health needs, according to Armstrong.
She said the health hotline fielded several calls from students exhibiting 鈥渟ignificant social and emotional needs.鈥 She also said parents called in wanting guidance on how to help their child navigate these problems and get the needed support.
鈥淭hey were able to be connected with the appropriate contacts and get the help they needed,鈥 she said.
One of the big questions when schools reconvene in August is how to assess students鈥 emotional state after a prolonged time of isolation, or any trauma they may have experienced in their own personal lives due to a family鈥檚 changed situation or even sickness or death of family members.
Armstrong said the DOE is providing 鈥渆xtensive training for school-based behavioral health counselors鈥 and getting information out to teachers 鈥渇or a referral process for the awareness that students who been away from school, they may have experienced situations that haven鈥檛 been positive.鈥
Results from distributed at the end of last school year indicate this gap. Nearly a quarter of the 8,600 student respondents in grades 6-12 said they were either 鈥渜uite concerned鈥 or 鈥渆xtremely concerned鈥 about their social and emotional well being, as of late May.
About 1,200 students said they did not have a teacher or other adult from school they could count on for help if needed during school closures and nearly 2,000 respondents, or about a quarter of the pool, said teachers or counselors were either 鈥渘ot at all helpful鈥 or only 鈥渟lightly helpful鈥 in supporting their social and emotional needs.
鈥淲e are on high alert, recognizing we must absolutely address the social emotional needs kids are returning to school with,鈥 Armstrong said.
Mattheus said the advanced practice registered nurses that are part of Hawaii Keiki receive training in mental health counseling and that their education is 鈥渂road in nature.鈥
鈥淭he goal was to be able to provide equitable access to health services for all DOE students,” she said. “We鈥檒l continue to have our phone line open.”
The summer health hotline has been extended to July 24. Summer hours are Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., excluding holidays. Call (844) 436-3888 (toll free)聽to speak to a school nurse.
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