Anonymous wrote:Ewww - endless posts about not wearing shoes in the house but yall are sending your kids to school with lice. So nasty.
The people who have the culture of "no outdoors shoes inside the house" are not the people who are sending their kids to school with lice, dumbo!Anonymous wrote:Our DCPS reports lice. I still deep condition and comb out my kids’ hair with a flea comb every 2 weeks, no matter what. I assume lice is just endemic at school; there’s always a chance of outbreak, and I’d rather catch it early. I have found that many parents do not understand how to properly treat lice, so the same outbreak just keeps going around.
Anonymous wrote:I have only ever known one person in my life that ever had lice, and that was decades ago, just a boy in school who was almost homeless, alcoholic dad and his mother had run away, so he rarely bathed.
School shaved his head and he got to come back to class next day.
Cannot imagine anyone in this day and age having lice. How gross!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child got lice at school and it traumatized me, it was so gross. I treated it with powerful shampoo, did nothing. I smothered it with conditioner, still came back; flat ironed every strand of hair and combed with a nit comb, still returned. Finally I figured out though research how to permanently rid her of lice and now her hair is in tight braids every day. The lice today are called super-lice for a reason, and they are basically endemic at this point, so parents should laser focus on prevention.
What did you do that finally worked? This is my nightmare TBH.
I learned that basically all forms of treatment work to “suffocate” adult lice, the eggs (nits) are very resistant to treatment and even one singular nit missed by the comb will restart the whole process. So the key is to kill all the adult lice, and the only 100% effective treatment is dimethicone, which you can buy super cheap on Amazon. You apply dimethicone mostly to the scalp and wait 20 minutes, wash out and done. Then precisely 10 days later you repeat the process for all the nits that hadn’t yet hatched. Baby lice can’t lay eggs, so two-three times of this permanently rids you or them. It also saves so much time and money because you don’t have to locate every egg or comb every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child got lice at school and it traumatized me, it was so gross. I treated it with powerful shampoo, did nothing. I smothered it with conditioner, still came back; flat ironed every strand of hair and combed with a nit comb, still returned. Finally I figured out though research how to permanently rid her of lice and now her hair is in tight braids every day. The lice today are called super-lice for a reason, and they are basically endemic at this point, so parents should laser focus on prevention.
What did you do that finally worked? This is my nightmare TBH.
Anonymous wrote:Pretty much all live are super lice and don't respond to shampoo or chemical treatments. Don't even bother. We go to a lice center and they have a heat treatment plus combing that has worked every time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child got lice at school and it traumatized me, it was so gross. I treated it with powerful shampoo, did nothing. I smothered it with conditioner, still came back; flat ironed every strand of hair and combed with a nit comb, still returned. Finally I figured out though research how to permanently rid her of lice and now her hair is in tight braids every day. The lice today are called super-lice for a reason, and they are basically endemic at this point, so parents should laser focus on prevention.
What did you do that finally worked? This is my nightmare TBH.
DP but what PP did wrong was thinking you could treat once and get rid of them. The problem is that none of the treatments are guaranteed to get rid of all the nits (eggs). If even a single nit survives a treatment, it will hatch and become a nymph, and then mature and lay more nits. So the key is to treat multiple times over the course of several weeks until it's not possible that anything could have survived. You also have to combine whatever treatment you use with nit combing, and keep nit combing at least every few days until you are done. Total treatment usually takes about a month.
Another reason it can recur is if your kid is getting re-exposed at school. So when there is lice going around, you should be nit combing weekly, wearing hair in braids, reminding your kid not to share hats or jackets (they can travel on collars or in hoods), making sure no one shares brushes, etc. There are also some things that might repel lice though it's not proven -- there are sprays with rosemary or tea tree oil or you can use shampoos or even just apply oil to the scalp. I don't think these are fool proof and would continue to nit comb weekly as long as I knew lice was around, but the tea tree/rosemary products can't hurt.
The key is to attack them on multiple fronts and to keep it up until it's eradicated. If your kid gets lice or even just nits, you need to assume you will be treating for a month, minimum. There are not quick solutions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child got lice at school and it traumatized me, it was so gross. I treated it with powerful shampoo, did nothing. I smothered it with conditioner, still came back; flat ironed every strand of hair and combed with a nit comb, still returned. Finally I figured out though research how to permanently rid her of lice and now her hair is in tight braids every day. The lice today are called super-lice for a reason, and they are basically endemic at this point, so parents should laser focus on prevention.
What did you do that finally worked? This is my nightmare TBH.