Find and read a nursing scholarly article that relates to your clinical practice (school Nurse) and is found in a peer-reviewed journal. ? What is th
Find and read a nursing scholarly article that relates to your clinical practice (school Nurse) and is found in a peer-reviewed journal.
· What is the research question?
· What research method is being used?
· How are the subjects chosen (explain the parameters, sample size, & how many)
· What are the results of the study?
· What are the recommendations?
· What are your opinions?
Submission Instructions:
· lose points for improper grammar, punctuation, and misspellings.
· It must be a research article. Write a 1-page summary using an outline of the steps of the research process, and discuss the study type, purpose, and research question(s) above.
· current APA style and references should be current
· The purpose of these article summaries is for you to educate me on the study – NOT the topic.
*** Turnitin report**NO AI**
DOI: 10.1177/1942602X241295803 For reprints and permission queries visit http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav. © 2024 The Author(s) November 2024 39(6) | NASN School Nurse 301
Mental/Behavioral Health
School nurses are members of the school- based mental and behavioral health support team. This consensus document was developed by school nurses and school nurse leaders in collaboration with leaders from national associations and organizations with a vested interest in K-12 mental and behavioral health. The document is also publicly available on the National Association of School Nurses website.
Keywords: Collaboration; Multidisciplinary Teams; Mental Health; Behavioral Health; School-based Mental Health
Introduction
According to a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the number of adolescents experiencing poor mental health is growing, especially among LGBTQ+, female, and Black students (CDC, 2023). In 2021 alone, 70% of LGBTQ+ students reported persistent feelings of hopelessness, and 25% of female students had made a suicide plan. Youth who have mental health problems
are more likely to experience violence, engage in risky behavior, and struggle with school. However, CDC notes that when youth have strong feelings of connectedness with school and family, those bonds can protect their mental health. Given the rise in poor mental health among students—and the role school connectedness plays in protecting mental health—it is critical that schools be equipped to provide a safe environment with mental health supports.
To identify key priorities and opportunities in this area, we gathered evidence from the literature and interviewed school health care providers and experts in school-based health services. Ultimately, our goal was to help schools build strong connections with students and deliver school-based mental and behavioral health (SBMH) supports to meet the growing need for them. SBMH care teams manage mental and behavioral health supports in their schools, addressing student needs ranging from stress management, safety planning, and substance use to suicide prevention and coping skills.
Supporting Youth Mental and Behavioral Health in Schools
Schools play a vital role in preventing mental health problems among youth, as well as in identifying and supporting youth who do have mental health problems. SBMH providers—including social workers, psychologists, counselors, and school nurses as specialized instructional support personnel—lead the way in helping schools fulfill this role. Multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS) is a common framework used by SBMH providers to assist students and match them to appropriate supports. Another framework, positive behavioral interventions and supports, provides a similar tiered approach to organizing and delivering services. Regardless of the framework, many schools have launched a student mental health program, and research shows that these programs help students achieve academically and build social and leadership skills, self-awareness, and positive connections to adults in their school (Youth.gov, n.d.).
1295803 NASXXX10.1177/1942602X241295803NASN School Nurse / MonthMonth XXXX / NASN School Nurse research-article2024
Elevating the Role of School Nurses in School-Based Mental and Behavioral Health A Consensus Document
National Association of School Nurses
Adolescents say they are more comfortable accessing health services through school- based clinics
302 NASN School Nurse | 39(6) November 2024
The rising number of students who have mental health concerns means that schools must prioritize time and resources when considering a student mental health program. Whether schools are just beginning to develop such a program or are seeking to expand an existing one, the SBMH providers we interviewed identified several key areas that schools can focus on to better support students (Box 1).
How School Nurses can Support SBMH Programs and Teams
School nurses have tremendous potential to work with other SBMH providers to implement school mental health programs, yet they often do not get the opportunity. Although individual school nurses and education systems have different levels of readiness or capacity to support SBMH programs, school nurses are most successful when the SBMH care team, principals, and superintendents engage with them and understand their role.
School nurses can build their SBMH team’s capacity to deploy a multitiered system of supports that is responsive to student needs. As members of interdisciplinary teams, school nurses can collaborate with school personnel— including teachers, psychologists, social workers, counselors, and principals—to assess, identify, conduct interventions for, refer, and follow-up with children who need behavioral health services (Reaves et al., 2022; Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration & Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2019).
School nurses are key members of SBMH care teams and support mental and behavioral health (see Image 1). They [school nurses] also have regular access to students in school clinics and are well-positioned to identify students with potential mental health concerns, especially for “frequent visitors”— children who often present with a physical complaint, such as an upset stomach, but could have an underlying mental health issue. This touch point can increase the speed at which problems are identified and treatment can begin.
School nurses promote health by helping students access physical, mental, and behavioral health care in school and in the community (Hoskote et al., 2023). These emerging practices can help policymakers, school administrators and teachers, and SBMH providers think about what school nurses can contribute to their own schools and how they can advance key SBMH priorities (Box 2).
Opportunities for Advancing SBMH Programs
The protective effects of school connectedness on youth mental health firmly place SBMH providers, school nurses, and other school personnel on the front lines of responding to the growing crisis (CDC, 2022). However, SBMH providers including school nurses
Box 1. Priority Areas for Advancing SBMH Programs for Students
Image 1. Ways School Nurses Serve as Members of the SBMH Care Team
November 2024 39(6) | NASN School Nurse 303
current efforts to address students’ mental and behavioral health needs, and improve systems of care. Box 3 shows opportunities for administrators and policymakers to make substantive changes at the state and regional levels, as well as actions providers and educators at the local and community level can take to support student mental health. We acknowledge that each school nurse and education system might have different level of readiness or capacity to support mental and behavioral health. Nevertheless, adopting some or all the following recommendations can increase system- wide capacity and create a more capable, integrated, holistic, and interconnected system of care.
Methods and Approach
We completed a literature scan to identify (1) current SBMH models and (2) descriptions of the school nurse’s role in supporting student behavioral and mental health. We analyzed data for common themes, existing programs, opportunities, and challenges to integrating school nurses into SBMH teams.
We held two meetings to discuss the role of school nurses in SBMH care teams and opportunities for further support and integration. The first meeting included school nurses in K–12 schools and school nurse leaders from regional and state-level educational entities. The second meeting involved leaders from national organizations with a vested interest in K–12 mental and behavioral health, including alliances, associations, and councils representing stakeholders from health- and education- based organizations. We analyzed data from these meetings to identify opportunities at the system, community, and school levels to strengthen how school nurses work with other providers to support students’ mental and behavioral health, with an eye toward further integrating school nurses in existing structures.
Note: In this document, the terms mental health and mental and behavioral health are used interchangeably to refer to the supports that school nurses
Box 2. Additional Opportunities for School Nurses to Support SBMH Programs
Box 3. Considerations for Leaders in Health and Education Fields
require the broader support of federal and state policymakers, local educational entities, families, and communities to fully realize their opportunity to help students who have mental health problems and those at risk.
The data we gathered from literature reviews and interviews highlight opportunities for state, regional, and community stakeholders to further embed school nurses into existing student support structures, amplify
304 NASN School Nurse | 39(6) November 2024
provide in mental health and behavioral health, including substance use.
This document is publicly available on the NASN website at: http:// higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws. com/NASN/8575d1b7-94ad-45ab-808e- d45019cc5c08/UploadedImages/PDFs/ Advocacy/CDC-03_SBMH_Consensus_ Document_edited_6-14-23-2.pdf
Acknowledgments
NASN contracted with Mathematica to engage school nurses and other valuable partners in discussions on enabling school nurses to help provide SBMH supports. The following individuals participated in these discussions and contributed to the content of this consensus document. They shared their lived experiences supporting student mental health and identified policy and structural opportunities to further integrate school nurses into SBMH delivery models.
Thank you to our school nurse participants
Alaska: Wendy DeGraffenried, BSN, R.N, NCSN, HN-BC. California: Dawn Anderson, MA, BSN, RN, PHN & Katie Nilsson, MSN, RN, PHN, CPN, RCSN. Colorado: Stephanie Faren, MSN, MPH, RN, NCSN & Kelli Mueller, MS, BSN, RN, NCSN. Connecticut: Mary Emerling, RN, MPA. District of Columbia: Elizabeth McDermott, BA, BSN, RN, NCSN. Florida: Amy Ponce, MSN, RN. Hawaii: Abbie Neves, PhD, APRN-Rx, PMHCNS- BC; Bobbie Jo Beyerle, MSN, APRN-Rx, NP-C; Jamie Boling, MPH, MSN, APRN- Rx, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC & Deborah Mattheus, PhD, APRN-Rx, CPNP, FAAN. Kansas: Paula K. Bunde, MS ED, BSN, RN. Maine: Pat Endsley, PhD, MSN, RN, NCSN & Tammy Diaz, MPH, RN, NCSN. Minnesota: Magen Borkenhagen, BSN, RN, PHN, LSN & Denise Herrmann, DNP, RN, CPNP, FNASN. New Jersey: Shelia Caldwell, BSN, RN, CSN-NJ, FNASN. Nevada: Breana Taylor, RN, MSN. Ohio: Ann Connely, MSN, RN, LSN, NCSN & Jean McGraw, RN, BSN.
Pennsylvania: Rebecca Kilfoy, MSN, ACNP, NCSN & Jennifer McCulloch, MEd, BSN, RN, CSN. Virginia: Angela Knupp BSN, RN; Karen Mask, RN, BSN, MPH; Rachell Myhr, RN; Joanna Pitts, BSN, RN, NCSN, CNOR & Heather Shea Pugh, BSN, RN. Washington: Annie Hetzel, MSN, RN, NCSN; Tessa McIlraith, MS, BSN, RN & Lynn Nelson, MSN, RN, NCSN. Wisconsin: Louise Wilson, MS, BSN, RN, LSN, NCSN.
Thank you to our participants from national organizations
American Academy of Pediatrics: Sonya O’Leary, MD, FAAP, American Academy of Pediatrics Council on School Health. American Federation of Teachers: Katherine Duncan, MBA, Senior Director, Strategic Partnerships. The JED Foundation: Katherine Duncan, MBA, Senior Director, Strategic Partnerships. Kaiser Permanente: Niti Kadakia, MBA, Director, Student Behavioral Health. Mental Health America: Em Skehill, BS, Director of Public Awareness and Education. Mental Health School Professional Grant Program: Tawanda Avery, MEd-SPED, Program Lead. National Alliance for Medicaid Education: Jenny Milward, Ed.D, Executive Director. National Association of Elementary School Principals: David Griffith, M.Ed., Associate Executive Director, Policy and Advocacy. National Association of School Psychologists (NASP): Nick Affrunti, PhD, Director of Research & Kathleen Minke, PhD, NCSP, Executive Director. National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP): Ronn Nozoe, MEd, CEO, Chief Executive Officer. National Center for School Mental Health: Jill Haak Bohnenkamp, PhD, Assistant Professor. National Education Association: Karuna Antani, MPH, Senior Health & Safety Specialist. National Parent Teacher Association: Emily Smith, LICSW, Manager, Programs & Strategic Initiatives.
School Social Work Association of America: Maria Badillo Diaz, DSW, LCSW, Board Member. School-Based Health Alliance (SBHA): Robert Boyd, MCRP, Mdiv, President and CEO; Andrea Shore, MPH, CPO; and Katy Stinchfield, MS, LPC, Director of Behavioral Health Programs. State School Nurse Consultants: Susan Acosta, BS, RN, NM State SN Consultant, New Mexico. The School Superintendents Association (AASA): Kayla Jackson, MPA, Project Director.
References Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
(2022). Toolkit for schools: Engaging parents to support student mental health and emotional well-being. https://www. cdc.gov/healthyschools/connectedness/ connectedness_toolkit.htm
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2023). Youth Risk Behavior Survey: Data summary & trends report 2011–2021. https:// www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/data/yrbs/pdf/ YRBS_Data-Summary-Trends_Report2023_508. pdf
Hoskote, A. R., Croce, E., & Johnson, K. E. (2023). The evolution of the role of U.S. school nurses in adolescent mental health at the individual, community, and systems level: An integrative review. The Journal of School Nursing, 39(1), 51–71. https://doi. org/10.1177/10598405211068120
Reaves, S., Bohnenkamp, J., Mayworm, A., Sullivan, M., Connors, E., Lever, N., Kelly, M. S., Burns, E. J., & Hoover, S. (2022). Associations between school mental health team membership and impact on service provision. School Mental Health, 14(3), 672–684. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12310-021- 09493-z
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration & Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2019, July 1). Guidance to states and school systems on addressing mental health and substance use issues in schools. SAMHSA Publications and Digital Products. https://store.samhsa.gov/product/guidance- states-and-school-systems-addressing-mental- health-and-substance-use-issues
Youth.gov. (n.d.). School-based mental health. https://youth.gov/youth-topics/youth-mental- health/school-based
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