High School Nurse
The school nurse or other school staff will contact you if your child becomes ill or seriously injured at school. If a parent/guardian cannot be reached, other individuals listed on the emergency contact list will be contacted. It is very important that you notify the school when there are changes to phone numbers and emergency contacts.
To minimize the spread of illness among students, report communicable diseases such as influenza, measles, whooping cough, hepatitis A, tuberculosis, chickenpox etc. to the school nurse immediately.
Returning to school after an illness
Students are to be fever-free for 24 hours without fever-reducing medication (such as Tylenol or ibuprofen)
No active vomiting or diarrhea for 24 hours
Other symptoms improving
COVID testing is not required to return to school
COVID-19 Updated Guidance
The CDC and Iowa HHS have updated the recommendations for persons diagnosed with Covid-19. Due to the Covid-19 vaccine and boosters widely available the guidelines have become less restrictive. Iowa HHS released an updated version of Childhood Illnesses and Exclusion Criteria for Education and Child Care Settings. It now lists Influenza, COVID-19 and RSV under a new category entitled Respiratory Illness. The CDC also updated their Respiratory Virus Guidance.
Children with respiratory illness, including Covid, are to remain home until they are fever-free for 24 hours without the use of fever reducing medications (Tylenol or Ibuprofen) AND other symptoms are mild and improving. It is no longer required to isolate for 5 days before returning.
Please contact your school nurse if you have questions or concerns about illness and when your student may return to school. Please see the COVID-19 fact sheet.
Learn more: Iowa Health and Human Services COVID-19 General Public Fact Sheet
2024-25 MCSD Communicable Disease Procedures
The parent/guardian will be called and the student will be sent home. Other symptoms that influence the decision to send the student home include general appearance and functioning in the classroom. After a period of observation a decision will be made to do one of the following:
Notify the parent/guardian for symptoms of illness, as determined by the school nurse. Not all student visits to the health office will result in parents/guardians being contacted.
Allow the student to rest in the health office for a brief period then return to class.
During times of high rates of illness, such as during influenza season, the length of time a student must remain home after fever/symptoms of illness may change as recommended by Marshall County Public Health.
COVID-19 variants are still circulating in the world and in our community, and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. Variants have not been shown to cause more serious illness or deaths, mainly due to protective factors such as COVID vaccinations. New treatments for COVID, and vaccines, have dramatically decreased the numbers of people who get seriously ill.