Administrators recommended Monday that two health-related policies be clarified to explicitly reference both HIV and other bloodborne pathogens, and the Perkiomen Valley School District policy committee agreed to consult school nurses before moving the language to first reading.
Dr. Russell, the district superintendent, told the committee that the Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA) had suggested a title change that references HIV specifically, but administration believes a combined title — "HIV and bloodborne pathogens" — better reflects current practice. "PSBA recommended a change in the title to . . . HIV infection and the policy used to be called Bloodborne Pathogens," Dr. Russell said, arguing that nurses provide instruction and supplies such as gloves and that the policy should reference both the Montgomery County Department of Health and the CDC where appropriate.
Board members asked whether HIV should be listed separately or be subsumed under a broader "bloodborne pathogens" heading. Missus Lofton raised a technical question about transmission and phrasing; other members debated whether naming HIV first provides clarity for the public, given regulatory requirements. "Personally, I'm fine with the HIV and bloodborne pathogen wording," said Mister Leggett, who said the explicit wording helps clarify regulatory responsibilities.
Dr. Russell said administration will follow up with school nurses and the department chair to confirm the recommended wording and correct minor typographical issues before returning the draft to the committee. The committee agreed to move the revised policy to first reading if the administrative updates and nurse feedback are satisfactory.
The committee handled several other policy reviews in the same session, including clarifications on medication self-carry (inhalers and epinephrine auto-injectors), facilities planning language, and copyright guidance; administration said it will update supporting administrative regulations and attach them to the policies as they move forward.
The committee recorded no final adoption; the policy will return for formal consideration after staff incorporate the nurse feedback and the committee reviews the revised language.