New Tennessee Law Requires Parental Consent for Non-Emergency Care at Schools

Teacher with Students
by Jon Styf

 

A new Tennessee law requires a doctor or nurse to contact parents before providing non-emergency medical care.

The law also applies to school counseling services when a child is in a physical, psychological or emotional crisis. School counselors are required to contact parents if psychological issues are brought to the attention of a counselor.

The Family Rights and Responsibilities Act went into effect July 1. Similar laws exist in Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Montana, Oklahoma and Texas.

“In Tennessee, we want parents to be fully informed of their child’s emergency and non-emergency situations at school,” Sen. Ferrell Haile and Rep. Jeremy Faison said in a statement. “This law keeps parents in-the-know and ensures they are properly consulted.”

The Republican lawmakers who sponsored the bill and are looking to inform parents on the law changes as the new school year begins.

Schools can obtain consent from parents at the state of a school year for non-emergency care.

“Parents love and know their child best, and this new law puts parents – not the government or government employees – in charge of making sure their child’s physical, emotional and medical needs are met,” the lawmakers said.

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Jon Styf is an award-winning editor and reporter for The Center Square who has worked in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Florida and Michigan in local newsrooms over the past 20 years, working for Shaw Media, Hearst and several other companies.

 

 

 

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One Thought to “New Tennessee Law Requires Parental Consent for Non-Emergency Care at Schools”

  1. Joe Blow

    Good Ole Ferrill. He will let children with gender confusion be mutilated but requires parent notification before an aspirin can be administered by a NURSE at school. What a crazy world in which we live.

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