Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are they in elementary or at a preschool or day care? If not yet ES age I would bet money the outbreak is coming from preschool/child care. The school needs to treat for lice, they need to make sure all the bedding is cleaned and treated, the dress up clothes need to be treated, especially any hats or headbands, all of that. And make sure your kids aren’t sharing hats, head bands, hair brushes, coats/jackets etc. etc. with other kids.
Op - 2 are in elementary and 1 is in daycare. The hardest is the girls. One of my girls has super duper thick hair. It’s impossible to find every little nit. I comb her for hours and do treatments and it always takes a month to completely clear it up.
That’s the answer then. If you aren’t finding every nit, then it will never go away. Have you done the olive oil thing over several nights?
+1
When my daughter gets lice, I do a thorough comb-out with a nit comb at least once every 3 days. I keep doing this until I find zero nits, preferably twice in a row finding zero nits. If you’re finding adults, you also need to do an oil treatment (soak hair in oil—olive is fine—for at least 10 minutes and rinse out).
Also do you know how to comb out properly? I watched the lice clinic person do it, and I do the same now. Take one small section, comb in multiple angles (comb on top, comb on bottom, comb on left, comb on right). Then I have a white bowl filled with water that I put the comb in and strum with my finger a couple times to flick any nits out. The whiteness of the bowl is key so that you can see the tiny dark nits.
It’s a tedious process, and you have to be 100% thorough. Takes me at least an hour if not more. I give DD the iPad to keep her occupied.
After you have two clean comb-outs, make sure you send her to school in a hairstyle that helps protect her, such as a bun. Spray her hair with smelly sprays that lice don’t like. Tell her not to touch heads with anyone!