In the United States, some physicians fail to coordinate their patient’s emergency action plans with the standards of their school districts and the American Academy of Asthma, Allergy and Immunology. This not only causes confusion among school nurses, but it may result in incorrect or untimely treatments. Incorrect treatments, or even delayed ones threaten patients by actually increasing their chances for anaphylaxis. In fact, new studies report that treating severely affected anaphylactic patients with epinephrine is inadequate, which warrants cause for great worry (Wahl et al. 2015,97). To combat this, physicians, school nurses, and parents must cooperate to ensure that patients receive correct treatment in the event of a potential emergency.