Bill Text: FL S0962 | 2024 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Student Health

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 2-1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-03-01 - Laid on Table, refer to CS/CS/HB 883 [S0962 Detail]

Download: Florida-2024-S0962-Comm_Sub.html
       Florida Senate - 2024                       CS for CS for SB 962
       
       
        
       By the Committees on Rules; and Health Policy; and Senator
       Hooper
       
       
       
       
       595-03343-24                                           2024962c2
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to student health; amending s.
    3         1002.20, F.S.; defining terms; revising a provision to
    4         authorize asthmatic students to carry a short-acting
    5         bronchodilator, rather than a metered dose inhaler;
    6         authorizing authorized health care practitioners to
    7         prescribe short-acting bronchodilators and components
    8         in the name of a public school; authorizing licensed
    9         pharmacists to dispense short-acting bronchodilators
   10         and components in the name of a public school;
   11         authorizing a public school to acquire and stock
   12         short-acting bronchodilators and components from
   13         wholesale distributors; authorizing a public school to
   14         enter into certain arrangements with a wholesale
   15         distributor or manufacturer; requiring a public school
   16         that obtains short-acting bronchodilators and
   17         components to maintain them in a secure location on
   18         school premises; requiring certain public schools to
   19         adopt a protocol developed by a licensed physician for
   20         the administration of a short-acting bronchodilator
   21         and components by school personnel; providing
   22         requirements for the protocol; providing that a public
   23         school’s short-acting bronchodilators and components
   24         may be provided to and used by trained school
   25         personnel or students authorized to self-administer a
   26         short-acting bronchodilator and components;
   27         authorizing school districts to accept short-acting
   28         bronchodilators and components as a donation or
   29         transfer if the bronchodilators and components meet
   30         specified requirements; providing requirements for a
   31         school nurse or trained school personnel to administer
   32         a short-acting bronchodilator to a student; requiring
   33         school districts or public schools to provide written
   34         notice of the adopted protocol to each parent or
   35         guardian; requiring public schools to receive a parent
   36         or guardian’s prior permission to administer a short
   37         acting bronchodilator to a student; providing for
   38         immunity from liability for specified individuals
   39         under certain conditions; amending s. 1002.42, F.S.;
   40         defining terms; authorizing certain students to carry
   41         a short-acting bronchodilator at school under certain
   42         conditions; authorizing authorized health care
   43         practitioners to prescribe short-acting
   44         bronchodilators and components in the name of a
   45         private school; authorizing licensed pharmacists to
   46         dispense short-acting bronchodilators and components
   47         in the name of a private school; authorizing private
   48         schools to acquire and stock short-acting
   49         bronchodilators and components from wholesale
   50         distributors; authorizing private schools to enter
   51         into certain arrangements with a wholesale distributor
   52         or manufacturer; requiring private schools that obtain
   53         short-acting bronchodilators and components to
   54         maintain them in a secure location on school premises;
   55         requiring such private schools to adopt a protocol
   56         developed by a licensed physician for the
   57         administration of a short-acting bronchodilator by
   58         school personnel; providing requirements for the
   59         protocol; providing that a private school’s
   60         bronchodilators may be provided to and used by trained
   61         school personnel and by students authorized to self
   62         administer short-acting bronchodilators; authorizing
   63         private schools to accept short-acting bronchodilators
   64         and components as a donation or transfer if the
   65         bronchodilators and components meet specified
   66         requirements; providing requirements for a school
   67         nurse or trained school personnel to administer a
   68         short-acting bronchodilator and components to a
   69         student; requiring private schools to provide written
   70         notice of the adopted protocol to each parent or
   71         guardian; requiring private schools to receive a
   72         parent or guardian’s prior permission to administer a
   73         short-acting bronchodilator and components to a
   74         student; providing for immunity from liability for
   75         specified individuals under certain conditions;
   76         providing an effective date.
   77          
   78  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   79  
   80         Section 1. Paragraph (h) of subsection (3) of section
   81  1002.20, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   82         1002.20 K-12 student and parent rights.—Parents of public
   83  school students must receive accurate and timely information
   84  regarding their child’s academic progress and must be informed
   85  of ways they can help their child to succeed in school. K-12
   86  students and their parents are afforded numerous statutory
   87  rights including, but not limited to, the following:
   88         (3) HEALTH ISSUES.—
   89         (h) Short-acting bronchodilator Inhaler use.—
   90         1. As used in this paragraph, the term:
   91         a. “Administer” means to give or directly apply a short
   92  acting bronchodilator or components to a student.
   93         b. “Asthma” means a chronic lung disease that inflames and
   94  narrows the airways, which can manifest as wheezing, chest
   95  tightness, shortness of breath, and coughing.
   96         c. “Authorized health care practitioner” means a physician
   97  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, a physician assistant
   98  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, or an advanced
   99  practice registered nurse licensed under chapter 464.
  100         d. “Components” means devices used as part of clinically
  101  recommended use of short-acting bronchodilators, which may
  102  include spacers, valved holding chambers, or nebulizers.
  103         e. “Respiratory distress” refers to an individual
  104  experiencing difficulty breathing, which can be caused by a
  105  multitude of medical factors, including chronic diseases such as
  106  asthma.
  107         f. “Short-acting bronchodilator” means a beta-2 agonist,
  108  such as albuterol, used for the quick relief of asthma symptoms
  109  and recommended by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
  110  Institute’s National Asthma Education and Prevention Program
  111  Guidelines for the Treatment of Asthma. These bronchodilators
  112  may include an orally inhaled medication that contains a
  113  premeasured single dose of albuterol or albuterol sulfate
  114  delivered by a nebulizer or compressor device or by a pressured
  115  metered-dose inhaler used to treat respiratory distress,
  116  including, but not limited to, wheezing, shortness of breath,
  117  and difficulty breathing, or another dosage of a short-acting
  118  bronchodilator recommended in the Guidelines for the Treatment
  119  of Asthma.
  120         2. Asthmatic students whose parent and physician provide
  121  their approval to the school principal may carry a short-acting
  122  bronchodilator and components metered dose inhaler on their
  123  person while in school. The school principal shall be provided a
  124  copy of the parent’s and physician’s approval.
  125         3. An authorized health care practitioner may prescribe
  126  short-acting bronchodilators and components in the name of a
  127  public school for use in accordance with this section and a
  128  licensed pharmacist may dispense short-acting bronchodilators
  129  and components pursuant to a prescription issued in the name of
  130  a public school for use in accordance with this section.
  131         4. A public school may acquire and stock a supply of short
  132  acting bronchodilators and components from a wholesale
  133  distributor as defined in s. 499.003 or may enter into an
  134  arrangement with a wholesale distributor or manufacturer as
  135  defined in s. 499.003 for short-acting bronchodilators and
  136  components at fair-market, free, or reduced prices pursuant to a
  137  prescription issued in accordance with this section. The short
  138  acting bronchodilators and components must be maintained in a
  139  secure location on a school’s premises.
  140         5. A participating public school must adopt a protocol
  141  developed by a physician licensed under chapter 458 or chapter
  142  459 for the administration of short-acting bronchodilators or
  143  components by school personnel who are trained to recognize
  144  symptoms of respiratory distress and to administer a short
  145  acting bronchodilator or components. The school district and the
  146  protocol must provide guidance for administering short-acting
  147  bronchodilators in instances of respiratory distress for a
  148  student with a known diagnosis of asthma and if approved by the
  149  school district for students with no known diagnosis of asthma.
  150         6. The supply of short-acting bronchodilators and
  151  components may be provided to and used by a trained school
  152  personnel member or a student authorized to self-administer a
  153  short-acting bronchodilator and components.
  154         7.A public school may accept short-acting bronchodilators
  155  and components as a donation or transfer if they are new,
  156  unexpired, manufacturer-sealed, not subject to recall,
  157  unadulterated, and in compliance with relevant regulations
  158  adopted by the United States Food and Drug Administration.
  159         8. A school nurse or trained school personnel shall only
  160  administer short-acting bronchodilators and components to
  161  students if they have successfully completed training and
  162  believe in good faith that the student is experiencing
  163  respiratory distress, regardless of whether the student has a
  164  prescription for a short-acting bronchodilator and components or
  165  has previously been diagnosed with asthma.
  166         9. The school district or school shall provide written
  167  notice to the parent of each student enrolled in the school
  168  district or school of the school’s adopted protocol. The public
  169  school must receive prior permission from the parent or guardian
  170  to administer a short-acting bronchodilator or components to a
  171  student.
  172         10. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
  173  contrary, a school nurse or school personnel of a school
  174  district trained in the administration of short-acting
  175  bronchodilators who administers or attempts to administer a
  176  short-acting bronchodilator in compliance with this section and
  177  s. 768.13, and the school district that employs the school nurse
  178  or the trained school personnel, are immune from civil or
  179  criminal liability as a result of such administration or
  180  attempted administration of a short-acting bronchodilator.
  181         11.a.An authorized health care practitioner, acting in
  182  good faith and exercising reasonable care, is not subject to
  183  discipline or other adverse action under any professional
  184  licensure statute or rule and is immune from any civil or
  185  criminal liability as a result of prescribing a short-acting
  186  bronchodilator in accordance with this section.
  187         b.A dispensing health care practitioner or pharmacist,
  188  acting in good faith and exercising reasonable care, is not
  189  subject to discipline or other adverse action under any
  190  professional licensure statute or rule and is immune from any
  191  civil or criminal liability as a result of dispensing a short
  192  acting bronchodilator in accordance with this section.
  193         Section 2. Present subsection (18) of section 1002.42,
  194  Florida Statutes, is redesignated as subsection (19), and a new
  195  subsection (18) is added to that section, to read:
  196         1002.42 Private schools.—
  197         (18) SHORT-ACTING BRONCHODILATOR USE.—
  198         (a) As used in this paragraph, the term:
  199         1. “Administer” means to give or directly apply a short
  200  acting bronchodilator or components to a student.
  201         2. “Asthma” means a chronic lung disease that inflames and
  202  narrows the airways, which can manifest as wheezing, chest
  203  tightness, shortness of breath, and coughing.
  204         3. “Authorized health care practitioner” means a physician
  205  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, a physician assistant
  206  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, or an advanced
  207  practice registered nurse licensed under chapter 464.
  208         4. “Components” means devices used as part of clinically
  209  recommended use of short-acting bronchodilators, which may
  210  include spacers, valved holding chambers, or nebulizers.
  211         5. “Respiratory distress” refers to an individual
  212  experiencing difficulty breathing, which can be caused by a
  213  multitude of medical factors, including chronic diseases such as
  214  asthma.
  215         6. “Short-acting bronchodilator” means a beta-2 agonist,
  216  such as albuterol, used for the quick relief of asthma symptoms
  217  and recommended by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
  218  Institute’s National Asthma Education and Prevention Program
  219  Guidelines for the Treatment of Asthma. These bronchodilators
  220  may include an orally inhaled medication that contains a
  221  premeasured single dose of albuterol or albuterol sulfate
  222  delivered by a nebulizer or compressor device or by a pressured
  223  metered-dose inhaler used to treat respiratory distress,
  224  including, but not limited to, wheezing, shortness of breath,
  225  and difficulty breathing, or another dosage of a short-acting
  226  bronchodilator recommended in the Guidelines for the Treatment
  227  of Asthma.
  228         (b) Asthmatic students whose parent and physician provide
  229  their approval to the school principal may carry a short-acting
  230  bronchodilator and components on their person while in school.
  231  The school principal shall be provided a copy of the parent’s
  232  and physician’s approval.
  233         (c) An authorized health care practitioner may prescribe
  234  short-acting bronchodilators and components in the name of a
  235  private school for use in accordance with this section, and a
  236  licensed pharmacist may dispense short-acting bronchodilators
  237  and components pursuant to a prescription issued in the name of
  238  a private school for use in accordance with this section.
  239         (d) A private school may acquire and stock a supply of
  240  short-acting bronchodilators and components from a wholesale
  241  distributor as defined in s. 499.003 or may enter into an
  242  arrangement with a wholesale distributor or manufacturer as
  243  defined in s. 499.003 for short-acting bronchodilators and
  244  components at fair-market, free, or reduced prices pursuant to a
  245  prescription issued in accordance with this section. The short
  246  acting bronchodilators and components must be maintained in a
  247  secure location on the school premises.
  248         (e) A participating private school must adopt a protocol
  249  developed by a physician licensed under chapter 458 or chapter
  250  459 for the administration of short-acting bronchodilators or
  251  components by school personnel who are trained to recognize
  252  symptoms of respiratory distress and to administer a short
  253  acting bronchodilator or components. The protocol must provide
  254  guidance for administering short-acting bronchodilators in
  255  instances of respiratory distress for a student with a known
  256  diagnosis of asthma and if approved by the private school for
  257  students with no known diagnosis of asthma.
  258         (f) The supply of short-acting bronchodilators and
  259  components may be provided to and used by a trained school
  260  personnel member or a student authorized to self-administer a
  261  short-acting bronchodilator and components.
  262         (e)A private school may accept short-acting
  263  bronchodilators and components as a donation or transfer if they
  264  are new, unexpired, manufacturer-sealed, not subject to recall,
  265  unadulterated, and in compliance with relevant regulations
  266  adopted by the United States Food and Drug Administration.
  267         (f) A school nurse or trained school personnel shall only
  268  administer short-acting bronchodilators and components to
  269  students if they have successfully completed training and
  270  believe in good faith that the student is experiencing
  271  respiratory distress, regardless of whether the student has a
  272  prescription for a short-acting bronchodilator and components or
  273  has previously been diagnosed with asthma.
  274         (g) The private school shall provide written notice to the
  275  parent of each student enrolled in the private school of the
  276  school’s adopted protocol. The private school must receive prior
  277  permission from the parent or guardian to administer a short
  278  acting bronchodilator or components to a student.
  279         (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
  280  contrary, a school nurse or school personnel of a private school
  281  trained in the administration of short-acting bronchodilators
  282  who administers or attempts to administer a short-acting
  283  bronchodilator in compliance with this section and s. 768.13,
  284  and the private school that employs the school nurse or the
  285  trained school personnel, are immune from civil or criminal
  286  liability as a result of such administration or attempted
  287  administration of a short-acting bronchodilator.
  288         (i)1. An authorized health care practitioner, acting in
  289  good faith and exercising reasonable care, is not subject to
  290  discipline or other adverse action under any professional
  291  licensure statute or rule and is immune from any civil or
  292  criminal liability as a result of prescribing a short-acting
  293  bronchodilator in accordance with this section.
  294         2. A dispensing health care practitioner or pharmacist,
  295  acting in good faith and exercising reasonable care, is not
  296  subject to discipline or other adverse action under any
  297  professional licensure statute or rule and is immune from any
  298  civil or criminal liability as a result of dispensing a short
  299  acting bronchodilator in accordance with this section.
  300         Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2024.

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