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Head Lice Policy

HEAD LICE-PRINCIPLES TO GUIDE SCHOOL POLICIES

USEFUL INFORMATION

 

* One of the worst “problems” of head lice is adult attitudes; having head lice is not a serious medical condition.

* “Irrational” reactions to head lice, e.g., fumigating classrooms, school buses, etc., are expensive and unnecessary.

* Much “information” about head lice is based on old, unproven information generated more than 80 years ago, some of it propagated by the companies which sell lice shampoos and sprays.

* It is possible but difficult to obtain head lice from casual head to head contact.

  * Transmission via clothing, hats, furniture, carpets, is also possible.

* Lice are fragile, but can be passed on by hats and combs in some cases.

* There is no significant relationship between hair length or personal cleanliness and transmission.

* It is unlikely that a nit on a stray hair shaft will hatch because the optimal conditions for hatching exist only on the human head.

* Stray lice that fall off a head are injured or dying and incapable of causing a new infestation.

* In time, inbreeding of lice on a person’s head causes them to die spontaneously; that’s why kids do not become covered with them.  It is a self-limiting condition.

* It is possible to tell whether treatment has been successful by the appearance of the eggs.

* CONSIDERING THE AVERAGE CASE OF HEAD LICE IS 3-4 MONTHS OLD BEFORE IT IS DETECTABLE, A STRICT NO NIT POLICY IS NOT NECESSARY AND ONLY DEPRIVES CHILDREN OF EDUCATIONAL TIME.

* Although schools, day care centers, etc. are often blamed for head lice outbreaks, it is the family unit that maintains cases leading to outbreaks in schools.