Individualized Health Plan (IHP) in an IEP

Sending our kids with health care or medical needs to school means making sure their routine health needs are met and that a detailed plan is in place in case of an emergency. As you sort through how your child will be supported while at school, you’ll want to familiarize yourself with the terms IEP, 504 plan, Individualized Health Plan (IHP), and emergency care plan (ECP). We sat down with MaryAnn Strawhacker, MPH, BSN, RN, SEN, a special education nurse consultant and former Iowa Director for the National Association of School Nurses (NASN) Board of Directors, as well as education advocate Lisa Carey to learn more about an IHP and how it can support your child’s health needs at school.

3 key takeaways
  1. An Individualized Health Plan (IHP) can be written by the school to document your child's health needs at school. It also includes a plan to train staff and protocol to address medical emergencies.
  2. The format of an IHP can vary from district to district, so it’s recommended to attach the IHP to an IEP or 504 plan.
  3. Even if there isn’t a full-time nurse onsite, all public schools have a nurse assigned to them. A student with significant health needs may require a 1:1 nurse.

What is an Individualized Health Plan (IHP)?

According to NASN, an IHP is “a written document that outlines the provision of student healthcare services intended to achieve specific student outcomes.” These documents are created for students whose academic performance or school attendance is, or may be, affected by their healthcare needs.

Nursing and health are services that may be included as part of both the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Under IDEA’s related services, “school nurse services” are provided by a qualified school nurse while “school health services” may be provided by either a qualified school nurse or other qualified persons, such as a trained paraprofessional. These are different from medical services, which are related services "provided by a licensed physician to determine a child’s medically related disability that results in the child’s need for special education and related services.”

Rules governing the components of an IHP are authorized under state nurse practice legislation, such as the Nursing Practice Act (NPA) of California, which mandates the scope of practice and responsibilities for registered nurses.

While nurses write care plans in every institution they work in, an IHP is specific to the school environment. It gives the school all the important and necessary information about your child, identifies and documents your child’s health needs (and how to manage them at school), creates health-related goals, documents interventions and solutions to potential health problems that may occur while your child is at school, and develops a thorough plan to train staff, address medical emergencies, and provide a safe environment in which your child can thrive.

Strawhacker tells us that an IHP is like a blueprint detailing school nursing and health services:

An IHP is also intended to help communicate your child’s specific health care needs to the people who support them at school: administrators, regular and special education teachers, therapy providers, health assistants, substitute teachers, and parents. An IHP is a great way to make sure the school staff is informed about your concerns and that plans are in place to address the unique health needs of your child. This could include how medication will be administered, what and when your child should self-report, how their health will be monitored, and who the go-to person will be.

Writing an IHP is the nurse’s responsibility, but the process ideally includes utilizing information from the student, their family, and primary physician, and it may include information from teachers and other educational and development specialists. And because health needs can change from year to year (sometimes day to day!), the IHP is meant to be dynamic, to serve as the basis for ongoing communication and collaboration between you, your child, their primary provider, the school, the school nurse, and the IEP or 504 team.

Why IHPs reduce school stress and increase school safety

There are many benefits to having an IHP. Well-documented and effective IHPs create an environment where students feel safer and have fewer medical emergencies, better managed medical symptoms, better attendance, and an increased ability to participate in learning and social activities.

“There are so many situations where the parent and the school nurse and the coach are trying to figure out how to safely have full participation, and it looks effortless, easy, and seamless,” Strawhacker tells us. “We don't want to stress out kids. We want them to always feel safe in the situation.”

Who is eligible for an IHP?

Creating a health plan will depend on the needs of your child, school policies and procedures, and federal and state disability laws. “IHPs are written any time that a child with health needs during the school day is in school,” Strawhacker tells us, including the transition to preschool. She explains that preschool entrance is usually when the first IHP is written, and it will follow a child with a chronic health condition until graduation.

The professional school nurse determines which students require an IHP, prioritizing those students whose health care needs affect their daily functioning or safety. To be eligible for an IHP, a child should present with health needs that require:

What is included in an IHP, and who writes it?

An IHP is created by a registered professional school nurse with information from the student, their family, and healthcare providers. The process is a bit different from creating an IEP or 504 plan (which are more standardized) because the format of an IHP may vary from state to state, sometimes from district to district. And if the IHP is written outside of an IEP or 504 plan, it’s very much dependent on the nurse to include all required elements.

Strawhacker tells us that an IHP “looks at all of those details related to safety, independence, and advocacy, all different areas based on need.” In this clip, she gives us an overview along with some examples of what an IHP can look like:

NASN’s School Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice sets the standards for what is included in an IHP and how it is developed. While an IHP is student-specific, it is built upon the nursing process including, assessment, nursing diagnosis, outcome identification, planning, implementation, and evaluation: