As children get ready to head back to the classroom, many school nurses are preparing for lice. But some of these small parasites – more of a nuisance than they are harmful – have been mutating and are now resistant to many over-the-counter medications.
That’s raising concerns and creating an unexpected hurdle to fighting the outbreak. Here & Now’s Lisa Mullins speaks with lice researcher John Clark about what he believes is behind the new breed of “super lice” and what it means for the future of treatment.
Ways To Treat Drug-Resistant Lice
- Prescription treatments: These are still quite effective, but they tend to be more expensive and require a visit to a doctor.
- Essential oils: Some essential oils are effective in treating for lice. The most common is something called the terpenes – the scent in pine trees.
- Go to a combing salon: It takes hours to comb out all of the lice, but it is effective.
Guest
- John Marshall Clark, professor of environmental toxicology and chemistry and director of the Massachusetts Pesticide Analysis Laboratory at the University of Massachusetts.
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