Dear Parent/Guardian: Your child has been sent home today because he/she was found to have head lice. There is no need for alarm. Head lice are a common problem among school children and can happen to anyone. They are not a sign of poor health habits or poor hygiene. We provide the following information so that you can assist in controlling the condition by following the procedure to treat the head lice. Your help is the key to eliminating lice from our school as soon as possible! Lice are highly contagious. Signs and symptoms of a lice infestation may include itching and irritations of the scalp. The main symptom is an “itchy” scalp. They can also cause decreased attention span in school as well as irritability. If you look closely at the scalp (a flashlight and magnifying glass may help), you will see small grayish-white eggs attached to the hair shaft, especially at the nape of the neck and behind the ears. These eggs (nits) are small, about the size of a pinhead, and resemble dandruff. Nits are attached to the hair shaft with a cement-like substance and are difficult to remove. Dandruff, on the other hand, is easily brushed from the hair. Head lice are usually transmitted through: 1. Close personal contact with a person who is infested with the lice or through the use of shared combs, hair brushes, and other grooming aids. 2. Sharing caps, hats, scarves, or coats or touching of these items with similar items at school, a friend’s hour or other places. 3. Nits may be rubbed off on cloth-backed furniture and then may make their way onto another person who subsequently sits on the same furniture. An informational sheet describing the necessary treatment for head lice is attached. Also attached are two treatment verification forms. These must be completed and signed before your student may return to school. You may wish to consult with your primary care physician concerning treatment for head lice. All these measures are necessary to prevent others in your family from getting lice, as well as keeping the school from becoming a place in which lice are spread from family to family. Thank you again for your cooperation in this important Health concern. Please do your part to prevent further spread by examining your child daily for the next two weeks and on a regular basis thereafter. If you have any questions, please call me. Sincerely, Byron List Headmaster TREATMENT OF HEAD LICE The following is a suggested procedure you may wish to use in treating head lice with your child and decontaminating personal items as well as the home environment. More information can be obtained by your physician, and the Arlington County Health Department or the CDC website
TREATMENT OF THE STUDENT 1. Remove your child’s clothing and place him/her in a bathtub or shower stall. Place their clothing in a plastic bag and seal the bag until the clothes can be washed. 2. Apply head louse treatment according to your physician’s instructions or the label instructions on the medicated shampoo bottle. There are medicated liquids available for head lice – RID, Kwell, etc. Kwell* is available only by prescription. RID and others may be purchased without a prescription at the pharmacy. There is no published evidence that indicates that one product is superior to another. 3. Remove nits with a very fine toothed comb. A comb that is designed specifically to comb out nits is best. (Often the combs that come in the box with the over-the-counter treatments for lice are inadequate.) It may also be necessary to hand-pick the lice from the base of the hair to ensure that all nits are removed. Removing all nits is essential for the eradication of head lice. 4. Have your child put on clean clothing after the treatment. 5. Repeat the treatment in 7 to 10 days. While the products mentioned above rapidly kill crawling lice, they may not kill all the nits (lice eggs). Repeating the treatment in 7 to 10 days kills the newly hatched lice. (The 7 to 10 day interval is the same as the incubation period for the louse’s egg). 6. All family members and close friends of your child should be examined. Family members who have evidence of infestations (crawling forms or nits) should be treated. Siblings or parents who share a bed with a known infested child should be treated whether or not there is evidence of infestation at the time of the examination. DECONTAMINATION OF PERSONAL ITEMS AND ENVIRONMENT Heat is lethal to lice and their eggs. Many personal items can be disinfected by machine washing in HOT water and/or drying using the hot cycle of the dryer. Lice eggs are killed in 5 minutes at 125 degrees Fahrenheit. Most home hot water heaters keep water at about 140 degrees when the heat selector is set at either medium or high. However, some hot water heaters are not able to sustain the 140 degrees when several loads of laundry are done one after the other, or when other demands of hot water are done simultaneously. To maintain the water at 140 degrees, or higher, allow time between loads of laundry or other demands on your hot water heater. If total reliance is placed in the clothes dryer for disinfestations, dry articles for at least 20 minutes on the highest heat setting possible for your dryer. Some non-washable articles may be disinfested in the dryer, provided the heat will not harm the item. 1. Machine-wash all washable clothing and bed linens that have been in contact with your child within the previous 3 days. 2. Personal articles of clothing or bedding that cannot be washed or dried may be dry cleaned or simply left in a plastic bag that is sealed for a period of at least 10 days. 3. Combs, brushes, and similar items, can be disinfected by soaking the item in one of the head lice liquid solutions for 1 hour or by soaking the item in a pan of water heated to about 150 degrees Fahrenheit for 5 – 10 minutes. 4. To break the infestation/re-infestation cycle, spray LI-Ban* (a lice spray) on inanimate objects that cannot be either laundered or dry-cleaned.
NOTIFICATION OF OTHER PARENTS/GUARDIANS Parents/Guardians of your child’s closest friends should be notified that their child may have been exposed to lice and may be infested since they play together. This is particularly important if the children have slept together or participated in activities that involve frequent body contact, such as wrestling, ballet classes, football, etc. ` RETURNING TO SCHOOL Your child may return to school the morning after he/she has been treated with head louse shampoo and had all visible nits removed. Parents/Guardians MUST complete the TREATMENT FORM with the box top attached, prior to your child being allowed to re-enter school. Parents need to bring the form and their child to school the day of re-entry. Students will be examined for live head lice and nits prior to being allowed to return to school. Students with live head lice or visible nits will NOT be allowed to return to school and will be sent home. FDA APPROVED ANTI-PEDICULOSIS PRODUCTS 9/09 I. Lindane-generic III. Permethrin-generic IV. Pyrethrims/Piperonyl Butoxide (base)-generic II. Malathion-generic Rivendell School HEAD LICE (PEDICULOSIS) TREATMENT FORM FIRST TREATMENT (Please attach box cover of shampoo to form) Date: ________________________________________________________ Student: _____________________________________________________ This is to notify the school that the above student has been given a medicated shampoo treatment. With (Name of Medicated Shampoo): ATTACH BOX COVER TO FORM On the following date: _________________________________________ I have attempted to remove all visible nits and to do the necessary treatment of the home environment. I understand that the medicated shampoo treatment must be repeated in 7 - 10 days and I will continue to examine my child and remove all visible nits in the interim prior to the time the second treatment is completed. Signature of Parent/Guardian: __________________________________ Date signed: __________________________________________________ ***Attach box cover of shampoo to form (Parent must accompany their child on the day they return to school) Rivendell School Head Lice (Pediculosis) Treatment Form SECOND TREATMENT (Attach box cover of shampoo to form or note that the same product has been used as was used for the first treatment) Date: ________________________________________________________ Student: _____________________________________________________ This is to notify the school that the above student has been given the Second medicated shampoo treatment.
With (Name of Medicated Shampoo): ATTACH BOX COVER TO FORM On the following date: _________________________________________ All visible nits have been removed. I have completed the necessary treatment of the home environment and will continue to monitor my child for potential nits during the coming week.
Signature of Parent/Guardian: __________________________________ Date signed: __________________________________________________ ***Attach box top cover of shampoo to form (Parent must accompany their child on the day they return to school)
School Name: __________________________ ASTHMA ACTION PLAN Student Name________________________________ Date of Birth ____________School___________________________ Student ID Number________________________ Grade ____Medication Allergies__________________________________ Activities student participates in at school: ________________________________________________
Using the empathic method in psychotherapy inevitably means understanding the expectations of both client and therapist in a therapeutic relationship, expectations that shape tacit psychological contracts and de-facto alliances. Breaking or fulfilling these de-facto alliances significantly contributes to the success or failure of the psychotherapy. For example, when a client and his/her therap