Head Lice: What Parents Need to Know (2024)

​By: Dawn Nolt, MD, MPH, FAAP

Head lice are a common problem, especially among school-aged children and their families. The lice can attach to the hair of anyone's head. It doesn't matter if the hair is clean or dirty. Head lice are also found worldwide in all different places, such as in homes or schools or the country or city. It doesn't matter how clean, dirty, rich or poor the place or person is.

Though head lice may be a nuisance, they don't cause serious illness or carry any diseases. Head lice can be treated at home, but it's important to check with the doctor first. (See "Head Lice Medicines," below).

Read on for information to help you check for, treat and prevent the spread of head lice.

What are head lice?

Head lice are tiny bugs about the size of a sesame seed (2–3 mm long [mm stands for millimeter]). Their bodies are usually pale and gray, but their color may vary. One of these tiny bugs is called a louse.

Head lice feed on small amounts of blood from the scalp. They can't survive more than 1 day without a blood meal.

Head Lice: What Parents Need to Know (1)

What are nits?

Lice lay and attach their eggs to hair close to the scalp. The eggs and their shell casings are called nits. Lice eggs are oval and about the size of a knot in thread (0.8 mm long and 0.3 mm wide) and usually yellow to white.

Some nits may blend in with some people's hair color, making them hard to see, and are often confused for dandruff or hair spray droplets. Nits attach to the hair with a sticky substance that holds them firmly in place. After the eggs hatch, the empty nits stay on the hair shaft.

What is the life cycle of head lice?

Head lice live about 28 days. They develop in 3 phases: egg (also called a nit), nymph, and adult louse.

This cycle can repeat every 3 weeks if head lice are left untreated.

How common are head lice?

Head lice are most common in preschool- and elementary school–aged children. Each year millions of school-aged children in the United States get head lice. However, anyone can get head lice. Head lice are found worldwide.

How do head lice spread?

Head lice are crawling insects. They cannot jump, hop, or fly. The main way that head lice spread is from close, prolonged head-to-head contact. There is a very small chance that head lice will spread by sharing items such as combs, brushes, hats and sports helmets.

What are symptoms of head lice?

Itching on the areas where head lice are present is the most common symptom. However, it may take up to 4 to 6 weeks after lice get on the scalp before the scalp becomes sensitive to the lice saliva and begins to itch. Most of the itching happens behind the ears or at the back of the neck. Also, itching caused by head lice can last for weeks, even after the lice are gone.

How do you check for head lice?

Regular checks for head lice are a good way to spot head lice before they have time to multiply and infest (are present in large numbers) your child's head.

  • Seat your child in a brightly lit room.

  • Part their hair.

  • Look for crawling lice and for nits on your child's scalp a section at a time.

  • Live lice are hard to find. They avoid light and move quickly.

  • Nits will look like small white or yellow-brown specks and be firmly attached to the hair near the scalp. The easiest place to find them is at the hairline at the back of the neck or behind the ears. Nits can be confused with many other things such as dandruff, dirt particles or hair spray droplets. The way to tell the difference is that nits are firmly attached to hair, while dandruff, dirt or other particles are not.

  • Use a fine-tooth comb (such as a louse or nit comb) to help you search the scalp section by section.

What is the comb-out method for lice?

The comb-out method can be used to help check for nits and head lice or to help remove nits and head lice after head lice treatment. However, the comb-out method usually doesn't work on its own to get rid of head lice.

Here is how you use the comb-out method:

  • Step 1: Wet your child's hair.

  • Step 2: Use a fine-tooth comb (louse or nit comb) and comb through your child's hair in small sections.

  • Step 3: After each comb-through, wipe the comb on a wet paper towel. Examine the scalp, comb, and paper towel carefully.

  • Step 4: Repeat steps 2 and 3 until you've combed through all of your child's hair.

How do you treat head lice?

Check with your child's doctor before beginning any head lice treatment. The most effective way to treat head lice is with head lice medicine. After each treatment, using the comb-out method every 2 to 3 days for 2 to 3 weeks may help remove the nits and eggs.

Head lice medicine should be used only when it is certain that your child has living head lice. Remember, check with your child's doctor before starting any head lice medicine. Also, when head lice medicines are used, it is important to use them safely as directed.

Here are some safety guidelines for lice treatments:

  • Follow the directions on the package exactly as written.

  • Never let children apply the medicine. Medicine should be applied by an adult.

  • Always rinse the medicine off over a sink and not during a shower or bath, so the medicine doesn't run off the head onto other areas of skin. Place your child's head over a sink and rinse the medicine off with warm water (not hot water).

  • Never place a plastic bag on a child's head.

  • Do not leave a child alone with medicine in his or her hair.

  • Store medicine in a locked cabinet, out of sight and reach of children.

  • Check with your child's doctor before beginning a second or third medicine. Your child may just need to repeat the same medication, or switch to a new one.

  • Ask your child's doctor if you have any questions or if treatments you have tried have not gotten rid of lice.

Warning about dangerous home remedies for lice

Never use dangerous products like gasoline or kerosene or medicines made for use on animals! Also, do not use home remedies, such as petroleum jelly, mayonnaise, tub margarine, essential oils or olive oil, because no studies prove they work.

What head lice medicines are available?

Check with your child's doctor before beginning any treatment. See chart, below, for a list of head lice medicines approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Head Lice Medicines

Permethrin lotion (1%)

Brand name products: Nix, Elimite and Acticin

  • No prescription needed.

  • Apply to shampooed and towel-dried hair; then rinse off after 10 minutes. Do not shampoo for 24-48 hours afterward.

  • Kills lice; does not kill lice eggs.

  • Retreatment is recommended between days 9 and 10 if live lice are seen.

  • Approved for use in children 2 months and older.

Pyrethrin-based product (shampoo or hair mousse)

Brand name products: RID, A-200, Pronto, R&C, Triple X and Licide

  • No prescription needed.

  • Apply to dry hair and rinse off after 10 minutes. Do not shampoo for 24-48 hours afterwards.

  • Kills lice; does not kill lice eggs.

  • Retreatment is recommended between days 9 and 10.

  • Approved for use in children 2 years and older.

Ivermectin lotion (0.5%)

Brand name product: Sklice

  • No prescription needed.

  • Apply to dry hair and rinse off after 10 minutes. Do not shampoo for 24-48 hours afterwards.

  • Kills lice; does not kill lice eggs. However, prevents newly hatched lice from living.

  • Only 1 application is needed.

  • Do not use veterinary formulations of ivermectin.

  • Approved for use in infants and children 6 months and older.

Malathion lotion (0.5%)

Brand name product: Ovide

  • Prescription needed.

  • Apply to dry hair and rinse off after 8–12 hours. Do not shampoo for 24-48 hours afterwards.

  • Kills lice and lice eggs.

  • A second treatment is recommended in 7–9 days if live lice are seen.

  • Approved for use in children 6 years or older.

  • Strong odor.

  • Flammable.

Spinosad topical suspension (0.9%)

Brand name product: Natroba

  • Prescription needed.

  • Apply to dry hair and rinse off after 10 minutes. Do not shampoo for 24-48 hours afterwards.

  • Kills lice and lice eggs.

  • A second treatment is recommended in 7 days if live lice are seen.

  • Approved for use in children 6 months of age and older.

Ivermectin 3-mg tablets

  • Prescription needed.

  • Use only when other medications have failed.

  • A second treatment is recommended in 9-10 days if live lice are seen.

  • Can be used at any age, as long as weight is at least 33 pounds.

  • Do not use veterinary formulations of ivermectin.

  • Approved for use in adults for head lice, and used in children for other infections.


What else do I need to know about treating head lice?

  • You may want to wash your child's clothes, towels, hats, and bed linens in hot water and dry on high heat if they were used within 2 days before head lice were found and treated. You do not need to throw these items away. Items that cannot be washed may be sealed in a plastic bag for 2 weeks or dry-cleaned..

  • Do not spray pesticides in your home. They can expose your family to dangerous chemicals and are not needed when you treat your child's scalp and hair properly.

  • All household members and close contacts should be checked and treated for head lice if necessary.

About school "no-nit" policies

Some schools have "no-nit" policies stating that students who still have nits in their hair cannot return to school. The American Academy of Pediatrics and National Association of School Nurses discourage such policies and believe a child should not miss or be excluded from school because of head lice.

Remember

Head lice don't put your child at risk for any serious health problems. Products should be used only if those products are safe. If your child has head lice, work quickly but safely to treat your child to prevent the head lice from spreading.

More information

About Dr. Nolt

Head Lice: What Parents Need to Know (2)Dawn Nolt, MD, MPH, FAAP is a Professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Oregon Health & Science University Doernbecher Children's Hospital in Portland. Dr. Nolt currently serves as medical director of the antimicrobial stewardship program and the department of infection prevention and control at the hospital. She is a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and previously served on its Committee on Infectious Diseases. Outside of the hospital, Dr. Nolt enjoys spending time with her husband and daughter, discussing the positive impact of superheroes, both in comic books and real life.

The information contained on this Web site should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your pediatrician. There may be variations in treatment that your pediatrician may recommend based on individual facts and circ*mstances.

Head Lice: What Parents Need to Know (2024)

FAQs

What to do if a family member has head lice? ›

Avoid hugging or other close contact. Check other kids and adults in your household for head lice. Often, by the time you get a call from a school nurse, your child has had head lice for a while. Your whole family may need to be treated to prevent reinfestation.

Do I have to wash everything if my child has lice? ›

It is not necessary and could expose children to harmful chemicals. Pillows, stuffed animals, clothing and other things that cannot be washed may be dry-cleaned. Or you can put them in a tightly-sealed plastic bag for 3 days (Picture 1). Any nits or lice on these things will die in 2 days.

Do parents usually get lice if their kids have it? ›

While we see lice most frequently in children, the fact of the matter is, if one child in the family has it, there's a high likelihood that it will pass to others in the household. Once lice is in the home, it doesn't discriminate based on age. So, lice can infest parents as easily as siblings of the child with lice.

Do you need to treat the whole family for head lice? ›

Everyone with head lice in your household should be treated on the same day. If a treatment doesn't work the first time, you can: try it again. try a different treatment.

Should you treat everyone in the house if one person has lice? ›

Head lice are most common among children and their families. If your family has head lice, tell anyone who has had head-to-head contact with them, so that they can check and treat their family if needed. There is no need to treat the whole family, unless they also have head lice.

How long is head lice contagious? ›

What makes someone contagious with head lice is having a mature, egg-laying adult female louse on your head that could travel to another head. After the first treatment, when the egg-laying lice are eliminated, you are no longer contagious.

How do I disinfect my house from head lice? ›

Try these tips to treat lice in your house:
  1. Use heat. Wash any items used or worn by the person in hot water, and dry them on high heat. ...
  2. Bag items in plastic. If you can't toss the items into the washer and dryer, seal them in a plastic bag for 2 weeks.
  3. Vacuum. ...
  4. Clean hair tools. ...
  5. Don't use insecticide fogs or sprays.
Jan 30, 2024

What are the chances of getting lice from someone? ›

Lice Exposure: Low Risk for Getting It

Lice are only passed to others by close head-to-head contact. Even then the risk is low. Lice are rarely passed to others by sharing caps or combs. Sleepovers and sleeping together only has a small risk.

Should I treat myself if my child has lice? ›

You should only treat your child for head lice if you see live lice or viable eggs. Make sure to check all the members of your family for infestation, and treat everyone at once.

Can you be around someone with lice and not get it? ›

While head lice are contagious, just not in the same way as measles or the flu. In fact, it is thought that lice have a 'low contagion' risk in classrooms.

Can you get lice from sitting next to someone who has it? ›

Head lice are spread through direct head-to-head contact. The lice do not hop, jump, or fly, so sitting near someone with head lice does not increase the risk of getting the lice. Lice are commonly spread throughout schools. Transmissions in schools are rare.

Can I sleep in my bed if I have lice? ›

Lice are most often spread by head-to-head contact with another person who has lice, such as sleeping in the same bed. Although they do not survive long away from a human host, lice may also be spread by wearing another person's hat or clothing, or by using another person's comb, brush, or bedding.

How long can you have lice before noticing? ›

How soon do symptoms appear after exposure? Some people may not have symptoms, particularly with the first infestation or when the infestation is light. It may take 4-6 weeks for itching to appear the first time a person has head lice.

What kills lice and eggs instantly? ›

No methods have been found to instantly kill lice, though tea tree and lavender oil combinations in carrier oils have proven to be effective and time-efficient.

Can head lice live in pillows? ›

Since head lice must feed on the scalp of a host to thrive, they cannot dwell on pillows or linens. Lice can only live for 48 hours after dropping off a host scalp. While lice can spread from one person to another's head if they share bedding, the odds of them doing so is unlikely.

What to do if you come into contact with someone who has lice? ›

Head lice are a common problem, especially among children who come in close contact with each other. If you or someone in your family has lice, begin treatment right away with a product specifically designed to kill lice. You may have to do more than one treatment. Follow the directions carefully.

Can you be around people with head lice? ›

Lice are highly contagious, spreading from person to person by close body contact, and by shared clothes and other personal items. The eggs laid by lice can usually be seen. This makes it easy for your child's healthcare provider to diagnose.

What to do if someone has lice near you? ›

Over-the-counter and prescription medications are used to treat head lice. Combing hair to remove nits is also an important way to get rid of head lice. To prevent getting head lice, avoid head-to-head contact with someone who has head lice, and do not share hats, scarves, coats, and other personal items.

How will you protect yourself from someone with lice? ›

Watch Your Head

They can't fly or jump. They most often spread with head-to-head contact. That means you usually must be close to someone with lice to catch it. Avoid activities that involve hair-to-hair contact as much as possible.

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