Document Citation: N.D. Admin Code 75-03-10-26

Header:
NORTH DAKOTA ADMINISTRATIVE CODE
TITLE 75. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
ARTICLE 3. COMMUNITY SERVICES
CHAPTER 10. CHILD CARE CENTER EARLY CHILDHOOD SERVICES


Date:
01/28/2014

Document:
75-03-10-26. Minimum provisions regarding emergency care for children.

The child care center shall have written plans to respond to illness and emergencies, including burns, serious injury, and ingestion of poison. The operator shall ensure that parents of enrollees are advised of these plans. Plans must:

1. Establish emergency response procedures;

2. Provide accessible posting of emergency response procedures and require training for all staff members con-cerning those emergency procedures;

3. Require the availability of at least one working flashlight;

4. Require at least one department-approved first-aid kit maintained and kept in a designated location, inacessible to children, yet readily accessible to staff members at all times;

5. Provide a working telephone line immediately accessible to staff members with a list of emergency telephone numbers conspicuously posted;

6. Require a plan for responding to minor illnesses and minor accidents when children are in the care of the child care center;

7. Require written permission to dispense medication and proper instructions for the administration of medication obtained from the parent of a child in the child care center who requires medication:

a. Medication prescribed by a medical provider must be accompanied by the medical provider's written instruc-tions as to dosage and storage, and labeled with the child's name and date;

b. Medication must be stored in an area inacessible to children, and medication stored in a refrigerator must be stored collectively in a spillproof container;

c. The operator shall keep a written record of the administration of medication, including over-the-counter medi-cation, for each child. Records must include the date and time of each administration, the dosage, the name of the staff member administering the medication, and the name of the child; and

d. The operator shall include completed medication records in the child's record;

8. Require a supervised temporary isolation area designated for a child who is too ill to remain in the child care center or who has an infectious or contagious disease, with the following procedures being followed when those signs or symptoms are observed:

a. Parents are notified immediately and asked to pick up their child; and

b. First aid is provided and medical care is sought as necessary;

9. Establish and implement practices in accordance with guidance obtained through consultation with local or state department of health authorities implemented regarding the exclusion and return of children with infectious or communicable conditions. The program may obtain this guidance directly or through current published materials re-garding exclusion and return to the child care center;

10. Identify a source of emergency health services readily available to the child care center, including:

a. A prearranged plan for emergency medical care in which parents of enrollees are advised of the arrangement; and

b. Provisions for emergency transportation, specifically that when a child is to be brought to another place for emergency care, an adult staff member responsible for caring for or teaching children shall remain with the child until medical personnel assume responsibility for the child's care and until the parent is notified;

11. Require information be provided to parents, as needed, concerning child health and social services available in the community; and

12. Require that the child care center inform parents in writing of any first aid administered to their child within twenty-four hours of the incident, immediately notify parents of any injury which requires emergency care beyond first aid, and require each injury report to be made a part of the child's record.