(1) The State Surgeon General, or his or her designee, in cooperation with the Commissioner of Education, or his or her designee, shall publicize the availability of funds, targeting those school districts or schools which have a high incidence of medically underserved high-risk children, low birthweight babies, infant mortality, or teenage pregnancy.
(2) The State Surgeon General, or his or her designees, in cooperation with the Commissioner of Education, or his or her designees, in equal representation, shall form a joint committee to evaluate and select the school districts or schools to be funded.
(3) Any school district, school, or laboratory school which desires to receive state funding under the provisions of this section shall submit a proposal to the joint committee established in subsection (2). The proposal shall state the goals of the program, provide specific plans for reducing teenage pregnancy, and describe all of the health services to be available to students with funds provided pursuant to this section, including a combination of initiatives such as health education, counseling, extracurricular, and self-esteem components. School health services shall not promote elective termination of pregnancy as a part of counseling services. Only those program proposals which have been developed jointly by county health departments and local school districts or schools, and which have community and parental support, shall be eligible for funding. Funding shall be available specifically for implementation of one of the following programs:
(a) School health improvement pilot project.—The program shall include basic health care to an elementary school, middle school, and high school feeder system. Program services shall include, but not be limited to:
1. Planning, implementing, and evaluating school health services. Staffing shall include a full-time, trained school health aide in each elementary, middle, and high school; one full-time nurse to supervise the aides in the elementary and middle schools; and one full-time nurse in each high school.
2. Providing student health appraisals and identification of actual or potential health problems by screenings, nursing assessments, and record reviews.
3. Expanding screening activities.
4. Improving the student utilization of school health services.
5. Coordinating health services for students with parents or guardians and other agencies in the community.
(b) Student support services team program.—The program shall include a multidisciplinary team composed of a psychologist, social worker, and nurse whose responsibilities are to provide basic support services and to assist, in the school setting, children who exhibit mild to severely complex health, behavioral, or learning problems affecting their school performance. Support services shall include, but not be limited to: evaluation and treatment for minor illnesses and injuries, referral and followup for serious illnesses and emergencies, onsite care and consultation, referral to a physician, and followup care for pregnancy or chronic diseases and disorders as well as emotional or mental problems. Services also shall include referral care for drug and alcohol abuse and sexually transmitted diseases, sports and employment physicals, immunizations, and in addition, effective preventive services aimed at delaying early sexual involvement and aimed at pregnancy, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, sexually transmitted diseases, and destructive lifestyle conditions, such as alcohol and drug abuse. Moneys for this program shall be used to fund three teams, each consisting of one half-time psychologist, one full-time nurse, and one full-time social worker. Each team shall provide student support services to an elementary school, middle school, and high school that are a part of one feeder school system and shall coordinate all activities with the school administrator and certified school counselor at each school. A program that places all three teams in middle schools or high schools may also be proposed.
(c) Full service schools.—The full-service schools shall integrate the services of the Department of Health that are critical to the continuity-of-care process. The department shall provide services to students on the school grounds. Department personnel shall provide their specialized services as an extension of the educational environment. Such services may include nutritional services, medical services, aid to dependent children, parenting skills, counseling for abused children, and education for the students’ parents or guardians.
Funding may also be available for any other program that is comparable to a program described in this subsection but is designed to meet the particular needs of the community.
(4) In addition to the merits of a proposal, selection shall be based on those school districts or schools that most closely meet the following criteria:
(a) Have evidence of a comprehensive inservice staff development plan to ensure delivery of appropriate curriculum.
(b) Have evidence of a cooperative working relationship between the county health department and the school district or school and have community as well as parental support.
(c) Have a high percentage of subsidized school lunches.
(d) Have a high incidence of medically underserved high-risk children, low birthweight babies, infant mortality, or teenage pregnancy.
(5) Each school district or school program that is funded through the provisions of this section shall provide a mechanism through which a parent may, by written request, exempt a child from all or certain services provided by a school health services program described in subsection (3).
(6) The services provided by a comprehensive school health program must focus attention on promoting the health of students, reducing risk-taking behavior, and reducing teen pregnancy. Services provided under this section are in addition to the services provided under s. 381.0056 and are intended to supplement, rather than supplant, those services.
History.—s. 6, ch. 90-358; s. 21, ch. 95-146; s. 813, ch. 95-148; s. 102, ch. 97-101; s. 49, ch. 97-237; s. 7, ch. 2000-242; s. 17, ch. 2008-6; s. 28, ch. 2012-184; s. 2, ch. 2013-89.
Note.—Former s. 402.321.
Structure Florida Statutes
Chapter 381 - Public Health: General Provisions
381.001 - Public Health System.
381.0011 - Duties and Powers of the Department of Health.
381.0012 - Enforcement Authority.
381.0016 - County and Municipal Regulations and Ordinances.
381.0018 - Application for and Acceptance of Gifts or Grants.
381.0019 - Disposition of Equipment and Material; Transfers to County Health Departments.
381.002 - Grant of Title to Prescriptive Medical Personal Property to Client.
381.0021 - Client Welfare Accounts.
381.0022 - Sharing Confidential or Exempt Information.
381.003 - Communicable Disease and AIDS Prevention and Control.
381.0031 - Epidemiological Research; Report of Diseases of Public Health Significance to Department.
381.00315 - Public Health Advisories; Public Health Emergencies; Isolation and Quarantines.
381.00316 - Covid-19 Vaccine Documentation.
381.00317 - Private Employer Covid-19 Vaccination Mandates Prohibited.
381.00319 - Prohibition on Covid-19 Vaccination Mandates for Students.
381.0034 - Requirement for Instruction on HIV and Aids.
381.0038 - Education; Sterile Needle and Syringe Exchange Programs.
381.0039 - Oversight of AIDS Education Programs.
381.0041 - Donation and Transfer of Human Tissue; Testing Requirements.
381.0042 - Patient Care for Persons With HIV Infection.
381.0043 - Blood Donor Protection Act; Blood and Blood Component Donors; Confidentiality.
381.0045 - Targeted Outreach for Pregnant Women.
381.0046 - Statewide HIV and AIDS Prevention Campaign.
381.005 - Primary and Preventive Health Services.
381.0053 - Comprehensive Nutrition Program.
381.0055 - Confidentiality and Quality Assurance Activities.
381.0056 - School Health Services Program.
381.0057 - Funding for School Health Services.
381.0059 - Background Screening Requirements for School Health Services Personnel.
381.00591 - Department of Health; National Environmental Laboratory Accreditation; Application.
381.00593 - Public School Volunteer Health Care Practitioner Program.
381.006 - Environmental Health.
381.0061 - Administrative Fines.
381.0062 - Supervision; Private and Certain Public Water Systems.
381.0063 - Drinking Water Funds.
381.0065 - Onsite Sewage Treatment and Disposal Systems; Regulation.
381.00651 - Periodic Evaluation and Assessment of Onsite Sewage Treatment and Disposal Systems.
381.00652 - Onsite Sewage Treatment and Disposal Systems Technical Advisory Committee.
381.0066 - Onsite Sewage Treatment and Disposal Systems; Fees.
381.0072 - Food Service Protection.
381.0075 - Regulation of Body-Piercing Salons.
381.00771 - Definitions of Terms Used in Ss. 381.00771-381.00791.
381.00773 - Application of Ss. 381.00771-381.00791; Exemption.
381.00775 - Tattoo Artists; Licensure; Registration of Guest Tattoo Artists.
381.00777 - Tattoo Establishments; Licensure; Temporary Establishments.
381.00779 - Practice Requirements.
381.00781 - Fees; Disposition.
381.00783 - Grounds for Discipline; Administrative Penalties.
381.00785 - Criminal Penalties.
381.00787 - Tattooing Prohibited; Penalty.
381.00791 - Local Laws and Ordinances.
381.008 - Definitions of Terms Used in Ss. 381.008-381.00897.
381.0082 - Application for Permit to Operate Migrant Labor Camp or Residential Migrant Housing.
381.0083 - Permit for Migrant Labor Camp or Residential Migrant Housing.
381.0084 - Application Fees for Migrant Labor Camps and Residential Migrant Housing.
381.0085 - Revocation of Permit to Operate Migrant Labor Camp or Residential Migrant Housing.
381.0086 - Rules; Variances; Penalties.
381.0087 - Enforcement; Citations.
381.00893 - Complaints by Aggrieved Parties.
381.00895 - Prohibited Acts; Application.
381.00896 - Nondiscrimination.
381.00897 - Access to Migrant Labor Camps and Residential Migrant Housing.
381.009 - Toilets Required by Department Regulations; Charge for Use of Prohibited.
381.0101 - Environmental Health Professionals.
381.0201 - Technical and Support Services.
381.0202 - Laboratory Services.
381.02035 - Canadian Prescription Drug Importation Program.
381.0205 - Emergency Medical Services.
381.026 - Florida Patient’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities.
381.0261 - Summary of Patient’s Bill of Rights; Distribution; Penalty.
381.028 - Adverse Medical Incidents.
381.0303 - Special Needs Shelters.
381.0402 - Area Health Education Center Network.
381.0405 - Office of Rural Health.
381.0406 - Rural Health Networks.
381.04065 - Rural Health Network Cooperative Agreements.
381.0601 - Self-Derived and Directed-Donor Blood Programs.
381.06014 - Blood Establishments.
381.06015 - Public Cord Blood Tissue Bank.
381.06016 - Umbilical Cord Blood Awareness.
381.4018 - Physician Workforce Assessment and Development.
381.4019 - Dental Student Loan Repayment Program.
381.40195 - Donated Dental Services Program.
381.735 - Office of Minority Health and Health Equity.
381.7351 - Short Title; Closing the Gap Act.
381.7352 - Legislative Intent.
381.7355 - Project Requirements; Review Criteria.
381.7356 - Local Matching Funds; Grant Awards.
381.739 - Short Title; Charlie Mack Overstreet Brain or Spinal Cord Injuries Act.
381.7395 - Legislative Intent.
381.74 - Establishment and Maintenance of a Central Registry.
381.745 - Definitions; Ss. 381.739-381.79.
381.75 - Duties and Responsibilities of the Department.
381.755 - Benefits Not Assignable.
381.76 - Eligibility for the Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Program.
381.765 - Retention of Title to and Disposal of Equipment.
381.775 - Applicant and Recipient Records; Confidential and Privileged.
381.78 - Advisory Council on Brain and Spinal Cord Injuries.
381.785 - Recovery of Third-Party Payments for Funded Services.
381.79 - Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Program Trust Fund.
381.815 - Sickle-Cell Program.
381.82 - Ed and Ethel Moore Alzheimer’s Disease Research Program.
381.84 - Comprehensive Statewide Tobacco Education and Use Prevention Program.
381.853 - Florida Center for Brain Tumor Research.
381.8531 - Florida Center for Brain Tumor Research; Public Records Exemption.
381.86 - Institutional Review Board.
381.88 - Emergency Allergy Treatment.
381.885 - Epinephrine Auto-Injectors; Emergency Administration.
381.887 - Emergency Treatment for Suspected Opioid Overdose.
381.89 - Regulation of Tanning Facilities.
381.895 - Standards for Compressed Air Used for Recreational Diving.
381.91 - Jessie Trice Cancer Prevention Program.
381.911 - Prostate Cancer Awareness Program.
381.915 - Casey Desantis Cancer Research Program.
381.922 - William G. “Bill” Bankhead, jr., and David Coley Cancer Research Program.
381.92201 - Exemptions From Public Records and Public Meetings Requirements; Peer Review Panels.
381.925 - Cancer Center of Excellence Award.
381.93 - Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program.
381.931 - Annual Report on Medicaid Expenditures.
381.9312 - Uterine Fibroid Research Database; Education and Public Awareness.
381.9315 - Gynecologic and Ovarian Cancer Education and Awareness.
381.932 - Breast Cancer Early Detection and Treatment Referral Program.
381.933 - Mammography Reports.
381.95 - Medical Facility Information Maintained for Terrorism Response Purposes; Confidentiality.
381.96 - Pregnancy Support and Wellness Services.
381.981 - Health Awareness Campaigns.
381.984 - Educational Programs.
381.986 - Medical Use of Marijuana.