Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our JKLM we have teams of parents that check all kids after holiday breaks.
Last year there was a persistent outbreak in my child's K class and a team of 3 parents (I was one of them) worked with the school nurse to check every child in that class weekly for 5 weeks.
What a huge violation of children's privacy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our JKLM we have teams of parents that check all kids after holiday breaks.
Last year there was a persistent outbreak in my child's K class and a team of 3 parents (I was one of them) worked with the school nurse to check every child in that class weekly for 5 weeks.
What a huge violation of children's privacy!
Anonymous wrote:The school clearly cannot give out the names of the kids but 100% chance the other kids know exactly who has it-they know who went home early.
They say that cleanliness has nothing to do with getting lice, but it has everything to do with getting rid of lice.
Short haircuts for boys (I mean buzz cuts are best), wash everything (sheets, towels, stuffed animals, coats, hats, scarves, etc.) and comb the hair with a lice comb everyday for at least a week.
At our school, the nurse (and a few other staff members who are good at it) checks each child in the class as well as siblings and parents too if they want.
Anonymous wrote:At our JKLM we have teams of parents that check all kids after holiday breaks.
Last year there was a persistent outbreak in my child's K class and a team of 3 parents (I was one of them) worked with the school nurse to check every child in that class weekly for 5 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Stay away from the neurotoxic pesticides. Go with LiveMD.
Anonymous wrote:Our kid is at Mundo Verde and there seems to be an ongoing lice outbreak in the school. Is this common city-wide? I'm not being alarmist- it never ends.
There is a continuous discussion from the parents when this arises on a parent listserve but that does not seem to stem the outbreak. Earlier, as one parent summarizes the schools response is that for them to get involved it was "deemed inappropriate, not cost effective, and some had concerns about stigmatizing"...
This can't be it. Really? Do schools no longer check each child in the classroom to identify the infested kids so they can get assistance?
Is there a city level health department that can be of some assistance?
Thanks all.