
Following a review of our medical procedures, we have updated our Emergency Medicine Protocol to ensure it reflects the wide range of opportunities available to pupils across and beyond the school day. Pupils now regularly move between classrooms, outdoor spaces, clubs, and enrichment activities, creating multiple transition points throughout the day. The updated system has been designed to ensure that medication remains safe, accessible, and consistently managed across all of these contexts, with clear responsibilities for staff, pupils, and external providers.
On Monday we will introduce an updated system to ensure that all emergency medication is always accessible to children throughout the school day, including before and after-school activities and trips and activities off site.
Our system is based on a simple principle:
This ensures that life-saving medication is always immediately available, even across our large and busy school site. The 'My Medicne Rules' will be introduced to children in assemblies on Monday.

Risk Assessment and Safety Assurance
We have carefully reviewed and risk assessed how medication is stored, moved, and accessed throughout the day, particularly in light of the multiple transition points pupils experience. This includes classrooms, playgrounds, clubs, and off-site visits & events. The system ensures that life-saving medication is immediately accessible at all times by the responsible adult, while also taking into account the age of pupils and the practical realities of a dynamic school environment.
Adjustments have been made where appropriate, for example, ensuring that liquid antihistamines are stored securely and accessed by adults rather than carried by children. Clear procedures are in place for handovers between different parts of the day, as well as for supervision, storage, and emergency response. All staff are trained and understand their responsibilities. These updated arrangements will be regularly monitored and reviewed.
Emergency backup medication is also kept in school and will be used only where appropriate and with parental consent.
Training on asthma and anaphylaxis will be rolled out to specialist club providers from this week (where training has not yet taken place).
This approach ensures that risks are minimised while enabling pupils with medical needs to fully participate in the wide range of activities offered throughout the school day.
Key points for parents
Parental Responsibilities
As parents, you play a vital role in keeping children safe. Please
If your child has medical needs, please be assured that these procedures are in place to ensure their safety at all times. As with all new systems, there may be teething problems that we will need to resolve. Please bear with us as we work through these.
Clare Haines