A Parent's Guide to the 'Nitty-Gritty'
About Head Lice |
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Paul Guillebeau and Gretchen Van De Mark
Department of Entomology
PDF
Click here for A School's Guide to the 'Nitty-Gritty'
about Head Lice
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Head Lice 101: The Basics |
- Do not panic! Head lice are not an emergency and, in
most cases, do not pose
any health risk. Misuse of pesticides, however, and use of unlabeled
treatments (ex., kerosene) can pose a health risk
- Head lice CANNOT live off a human host for more than 24-48 hours.
Head lice CANNOT live on pets. Head lice CANNOT reproduce in carpets,
furniture or other household furnishings.
- PESTICIDE SPRAYS DO LITTLE OR NOTHING TO CONTROL LICE. NEVER
treat your home, car, furniture, beds, pillows or clothing with pesticides
(e.g., 'lice bombs,' flea bombs, sprays, etc.) in an attempt to control
head lice. You will expose yourself and your family to unnecessary pesticide
risk.
- If your school sprays rooms, buses, furniture, etc., to control head
lice, ask them to stop immediately. Refer your school to the Cooperative
Extension Service brochure called A School's Guide
to the 'Nitty-Gritty' about Head Lice.
- Head lice are very common among all classes of people. More than 12
million people, mostly children and school personnel, get head lice
each year.
- Direct head-to-head contact with an infested person is the main way
head lice are transmitted, but they may also be transmitted by sharing
hats, scarves, headphones, combs and other hair accessories. Lice cannot
hop, jump or fly, but they can crawl rapidly.
- The best treatment for head lice is manual removal (see '10 Tips for
Manual Removal' in this brochure).
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If a lice shampoo is warranted, ask your doctor or pharmicist for
specifics on the product and follow all label instructions
exactly. Misapplications can be ineffective and dangerous
as well.
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| Head lice are small, wingless parasitic insects.
They are typically 1/6 to 1/8 inch long, brownish in color with darker margins.
The claws on the end of each of their six legs are well adapted to grasping
a hair strand. |
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Figure 1:
Head Louse
Pediculus capitis |
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A child cannot "catch nits."
Nits (lice eggs) can only be laid
by live lice.
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| Female head lice glue their grayish-white
to brown eggs (nits) securely to hair shafts. The eggs are resistant to
pesticides, and they are difficult to remove without a special 'nit-comb.'
The nits are generally near the scalp, but they may be found anywhere on
the hair shaft. |
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Figure 2:
Nits (lice eggs)
(photo courtesy University of Florida) |
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How to Avoid a 'Hair-Raising'
Experience |
- Watch for signs of head lice. Check your children every few days if
head lice are reported at their school. Lice are easier to eliminate
if caught early.
- Teach your children not to share hats, head-gear, scarves, headphones
and grooming items (combs, hairbrushes, etc.) and to avoid direct head-to-head
contact.
- To kill lice on bedding, clothes, etc., wash and dry them as you would
ordinarily. NEVER add any pesticide. Vacuum materials that cannot be
washed.
- If you are concerned about head lice on carpets or furniture, vacuum
them thoroughly. NEVER spary them with a pesticide.
- To kill lice on brushes, combs or hair accessories, wash them with
hot, soapy water. NEVER spray them with a pesticide.
- Cooperate with your school's head lice policy. Your child may be temporarily
excluded from the school, but the policy helps avoid widespread lice
outbreaks.
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10 Tips for Manual Removal |
- Work in a well lighted area or use a flashlight and hand lens.

- Use a grooming comb or hairbrush to remove tangles. A hair detangler
spray or other hair conditioner may aid in this process.
- Divide the hair into sections and fasten off the hair that is not
being worked on.
- Use a lice comb to detect and remove lice and nits. See figure
1 and figure 2 in this brochure.
- Go through hair sections from the scalp to the end of the hair. Nits
are usually found close to the scalp.
- Dip the comb in a cup of hot, soapy water or use tape to remove lice,
nits or debris from the comb.
- Sift
through the same section of hair and look for attached nits and live
lice.
- Move on to the next section until the entire scalp and all hair has
been checked.
- Screen the infested person every day for 10 days and regularly thereafter.
- If additional nits (at least 3-5 per day) are discovered, another
manual search is recommended.

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Circular 851 / Reviewed March 2009
The University of
Georgia and Ft. Valley State University, the U.S. Department of Agriculture
and counties of the state cooperating. The Cooperative Extension Service,
the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
offers educational programs, assistance and materials to all people without
regard to race, color, national origin, age, sex or disability.
An
Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Organization Committed to a Diverse
Work Force
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