Wellbeing and Health In-reach Nurse (WHIN) Coordinator Program Guideline and Model of Care.
Students and their family members are referred to the WHIN Coordinator program for assistance in identifying and understanding their health and wellbeing needs and accessing appropriate supports and services.
The WHIN Coordinator program can accept the referrals for:
Students and their immediate family members can be referred to the WHIN Coordinator program for care coordination and care navigation for the following:
The following falls outside the scope of the program
Referrals to the WHIN Coordinator program can be made using the Wellbeing Nurse Referral Form (Appendix 3). Students and their family members can be referred to the WHIN Coordinator program through two referral paths (Figure 2).
Figure 2: Referral pathways
Any child or young person attending a school with a wellbeing nurse can be referred to the program by their parent, carer or guardian. Students 14 years and older can refer themselves to the program. The referral can be made directly to the wellbeing nurse in person, by email, telephone or videoconference. If a student under the age of 14 years self refers to the program, the wellbeing nurse obtains parental consent prior to accepting the referral. Further guidance is provided in the Consent section of the Guideline.
The school learning and support and wellbeing team, school principal or school staff can refer a student of any age at the school to the WHIN Coordinator program. Parents/carers/guardian can ask the school learning and support and wellbeing team to refer their child to the program. Students aged 14 years and over can also ask the learning and support team to refer them to the program. The school learning and support and wellbeing team determines when a referral by this team to the WHIN Coordinator program is appropriate.
NSW Health services may refer students enrolled at the school to receive assistance to engage with health and community services for any additional follow-up treatment
The wellbeing nurse assesses each referral and determines if the referral meets the eligibility criteria and notifies the referrer whether they have accepted or declined the referral. If the referral is declined, the wellbeing nurse provides a reason for declining the referral and suggests alternative care pathways, if appropriate.
The wellbeing nurse informs the school learning and support and wellbeing team, school principal or school executive as required when a student referral has been accepted and documents the referral in the school’s centralised record system. Further guidance on documenting a student’s referral in the school's centralised record system is provided in the Documentation section of the Guideline.