CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
Sec. 10-205. Appointment of school medical advisors.
Sec. 10-205. Appointment of school medical advisors. Each local or regional
board of education of any town having a population of ten thousand or more shall, and
each local or regional board of education of any town having a population of fewer than
ten thousand may, appoint one or more legally qualified practitioners of medicine as
school medical advisors. The advisor or advisors shall be assigned to the public school
or schools within the limits of the school district. The boards shall provide such medical
advisors with adequate facilities to conduct health examinations of individual pupils
and to discharge such duties as may be prescribed by such board. In towns in which the
board of health or department of health is maintaining such service substantially as
required in connection with the school program of health supervision and other duties
performed by school medical advisors, the board of health or department of health shall
appoint and assign, with the consent of the local or regional board of education, such
advisors. The board of education, with the approval of the director of health and with
the consent of the chief executive officer of the town, may designate such town's director
of health, as provided under section 19a-200, or other town medical officers as the chief
medical advisor for its public schools. Two or more boards of education may unite in
the hiring and appointing of school medical advisors under arrangements for the payment
of the expenses thereof and the performance of duties agreed upon by their boards of
education. Each local or regional board of education shall prescribe the functions and
duties of the school medical advisor in order that the program of health protection and
health supervision, as outlined by such board and pursuant to the general statutes, shall
be carried out.
(1949 Rev., S. 1466; 1972, P.A. 239, S. 1; P.A. 80-440, S. 1, 10.)
History: 1972 act added provisions concerning town director of health serving as chief medical advisor for schools;
P.A. 80-440 substituted local or regional board of education for town and town board references, made designation of
director of health contingent upon board's decision with director's approval and chief executive officer's consent rather
than contingent upon chief executive officer's decision after consultation with board, made health programs not subject
to approval by state board of education and deleted provision concerning consultation between director and town board
re functions and duties of medical advisors.
Cited. 115 C. 160; see note to chapter 106. Cited. 152 C. 568.
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