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<blockquote data-quote="hanadr" data-source="post: 20081" data-attributes="member: 8110"><p>Certainly talk to the staff. They may have issues about blood testing. There are protocols for epipen use for allegies and so on. there are heslth and safety rules to do with blood. i taught sciences for 40 years and only in the last few were experiments on blood banned. To do with blood borne diseases. You need to check it out if you want them to test. Otherwise, you need to be there to do it yourself. the class teacher may be pleased to have anothe competent adult in the classroom. when my daughter was in reception class (25 years ago, she's a teacher and mother now) there was a boy with severe eczema. His mother often went in to school and unless her son really needed her, she worked with other children. I well remember her coming to cream him after swimming.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hanadr, post: 20081, member: 8110"] Certainly talk to the staff. They may have issues about blood testing. There are protocols for epipen use for allegies and so on. there are heslth and safety rules to do with blood. i taught sciences for 40 years and only in the last few were experiments on blood banned. To do with blood borne diseases. You need to check it out if you want them to test. Otherwise, you need to be there to do it yourself. the class teacher may be pleased to have anothe competent adult in the classroom. when my daughter was in reception class (25 years ago, she's a teacher and mother now) there was a boy with severe eczema. His mother often went in to school and unless her son really needed her, she worked with other children. I well remember her coming to cream him after swimming. [/QUOTE]
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