Health Office Analytics

Two-Year Comprehensive Health Data (2023-24 & 2024-25)

District Overview

Comprehensive health office statistics across all VVUSD schools

378,195
Total Health Office Visits
27,886
Students Sent Home
7.4%
Sent Home Rate
426
911 Emergency Calls

📊 District Health Summary

Over the past two school years, VVUSD health offices have managed nearly 380,000 student visits across all school sites. With a 7.4% rate of students being sent home, our health teams effectively manage and resolve the majority of health concerns on-site, minimizing instructional time lost. Emergency interventions including 426 911 calls, 278 EpiPen administrations, and extensive chronic condition management demonstrate the critical role of school health services.

Top 10 Schools by Visit Volume

Schools with the highest number of health office visits

Monthly Visit Trends (2024-25)

Health office visits by month this school year

School Site Analysis

Visit rates and patterns by individual schools

🏫 Per-Student Visit Analysis

When adjusted for enrollment, per-student visit rates reveal which schools have the highest health office utilization relative to their size. This metric helps identify schools that may need additional health resources, have unique student populations with greater health needs, or demonstrate different patterns of health office usage.

Top 15 Schools by Total Volume

Raw visit counts across all reporting periods

Top 15 Schools by Per-Student Rate

Visits per 100 students (enrollment-adjusted)

Students Sent Home by School

Top 15 schools by number of students sent home

Visit Type Analysis

Breakdown of health conditions and reasons for visits

🩺 Health Condition Categories

  • Head Injuries Lead All Conditions: Nearly 10,000 head injury assessments demonstrate the critical importance of trained health staff for concussion protocols and injury evaluation
  • Chronic Condition Management: Over 12,000 blood glucose checks and 5,300 insulin administrations show intensive diabetes care support across the district
  • Specialized Care Needs: Nearly 13,000 toileting assistance instances and 3,200 catheterizations reveal significant support for students with complex medical needs
  • Infectious Disease Monitoring: COVID-19 led infectious disease tracking with 1,058 positive cases, followed by pink eye (421) and lice exclusions (404)

Top Infectious Diseases

Most common contagious conditions

Injury Types

Categories of physical injuries

Chronic Condition Management

Ongoing health support provided

Specialized Care Procedures

Complex medical support services

Emergency Interventions

Critical emergency responses

Medical Interventions & Support

Specialized care and emergency responses provided by health staff

💉 Critical Healthcare Services

VVUSD health offices provide far more than basic first aid. Our nurses and LVNs deliver sophisticated medical care including diabetes management (17,500+ interventions), respiratory support, specialized feeding and toileting assistance, and life-saving emergency interventions. This level of care enables students with complex medical needs to access education safely.

12,288
Blood Glucose Checks
5,309
Insulin Administrations
12,777
Toileting Assistance
278
EpiPen Uses

Diabetes Care

Blood glucose monitoring and insulin administration

Respiratory Support

Asthma and breathing assistance

Complex Care Procedures

Tube feeding, catheterization, and suction

Emergency Medications

Life-saving interventions administered

Preventive Care

Vision, hearing, and lice screenings

Critical Responses

911 calls and emergency medical situations

Key Insights & Recommendations

Strategic findings for health services planning

🎯 Executive Summary

VVUSD health offices serve as a critical safety net, managing 378,000+ visits over two years while keeping 92.6% of students on campus for continued learning. The data reveals three priority areas: (1) High schools require robust staffing due to sheer volume (Orange Vista: 10,500+ visits), (2) Diabetes care has become a major service line requiring specialized training and resources, and (3) Complex care needs (toileting, feeding, catheterization) demand significant nursing time at multiple sites. Emergency responses, while relatively rare, demonstrate the life-saving importance of trained health staff. Strategic investments in health services directly support instructional time, student safety, and equitable access to education for students with health challenges.

Recommendations for Leadership

1. Staffing Analysis: Conduct site-by-site workload assessment using this data to justify health office staffing levels

2. Specialized Training: Invest in diabetes care and complex medical needs training for health staff

3. Emergency Preparedness: Audit emergency medication supplies and communication systems at every site

4. Data Systems: Implement consistent reporting to enable ongoing analysis and resource allocation

5. Communications: Share this data with board, parents, and community to demonstrate the value of school health services