Your Child’s Health: Our approach is to educate students to be responsible for their own health and safety where it is within their control. All staff have had basic first aid training. In case of a minor illness or accident at school, children will first be treated at school by a certified school nurse. Parents will be called and asked to pick up their children in more serious cases. In emergencies, the school will immediately send the student to the nearest hospital and inform the parents. For less severe cases, the school will take students to Rajavej Hospital.
If your child is prone to anaphylaxis (severe allergic reaction), parents must provide the school with an Epinephrine Auto-Injector (EpiPen) to be kept at school.
If your child needs to take any medication during the school day, you must inform the Secondary School Office about the same, and we ask the medication be made available.
If your Child Gets Sick During the School Day: A student who becomes ill at school must report to the School Nurse or the Secondary School Secretary. Any student who vomits or is found to have a fever must leave school and remain at home for at least one fever-free day. Parents will be contacted to arrange for the student to be collected, and the parent should sign the student out. Students checking out of school due to illness will not be allowed to return for school-sponsored practices, performances, competitions, or other events, except in highly unusual circumstances approved by the Secondary School Principal.
Checking your Child's Health:
Fever: Parents are asked not to send their children to school if they have an above-normal temperature (over 37.5 degrees Celsius). Should school staff identify the onset of a raised temperature during the school day, parents will immediately be called to collect their child. This is for the benefit of the child but also to prevent infection in other children.