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Discussion:
head lice
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Anti-lice shampoo - made with insecticide; Critics warn it's available at many stores
Posted By MICHAEL OLIVEIRA

Parents of children battling head lice are being urged to avoid over-the-counter treatments that contain a pesticide outlawed for agricultural use in dozen of countries - including Canada - because of its adverse effects on humans and the water supply.

While a number of lice shampoos don't contain lindane, store shelves across the country are still stocked with brands that employ the controversial chemical.

Lindane-based pharmaceuticals may represent the extreme when it comes to killing lice, but environmental activists say parents are often so disturbed by the thought of their kids harbouring bugs, and the stigma of becoming infected, that they adopt an "eradicate at any cost" stance.

"I don't really think that people comprehend alternative substances are effective and we're more or less dousing our children in pesticides" when using lindane, said Kevin Mercer of the group Riversides, an advocate on water quality issues.

"Using lindane to kill head lice is like using a sledgehammer to kill an ant."

While several environmental groups have called for a ban on lindane-based pharmaceuticals, Health Canada still allows for its use in lice and scabies treatments, even though its use as an agricultural pesticide has been banned.

The Canadian Pediatric Society is reviewing its position on lindane products and currently recommends that they not be used on infants and children under 17.

The society advises that products that contain pyrethrin or permethrin, instead of lindane, are considered safe.

California banned lindane products in 2002 amid concerns the chemical was showing up in wastewater and because lindane-based medications were generating reports of skin irritation, dizziness, headaches and, in some extreme cases, convulsions and death.

California prepared an estimate for a single treatment of a lindane-based product that was washed down the drain.

The study found it impacted 22 million litres of water and bringing contamination above the limit of 19 parts per trillion.

A few years after the ban was implemented, officials said lindane levels had become nearly undetectable in the water supply and there was no notable increase in lice or scabies outbreaks.

Several U.S. states in the Great Lakes basin are now considering a similar ban, but the Ontario government and Health Canada say they're not overly concerned about the impacts of lindane-based shampoos.

There is evidence that shampoos are causing some levels of lindane to show up in municipal wastewater effluent testing but "it is uncommon and would have minimal impact to the environment," said John Steele, a spokesman for Ontario's Ministry of the Environment.

Health Canada conducted a safety evaluation for lindane and found the risks associated with occasional and short-duration exposure to head lice and scabies products were less serious than when the chemical was used as an agricultural pesticide.

http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/A...
Posted on 03/17/08, 03:03 pm
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Reply #1 - 03/17/08  8:41pm
" My kids have not had lice yet....knock on wood!

From what I hear, an effective alternative for the head is mayonaise with a cap as long as they can stand it. Also, the only real effective way to control it is to put everything they have touched throught the wash then dryer on HIGH HEAT for more than 10 minutes. Repeating all above several times over.

Would love to hear other alternatives....just in case we need to use these safer and better options. "
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Reply #2 - 03/17/08  10:08pm
" OMG, we had that problem no that long ago.We tried all the otc stuff it didn't work.My friend told me about the mayo thing.I tried it.Mayo works wonders,YEAH! "
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Reply #3 - 03/18/08  4:16pm
" I have this unrealistic and obsessive fear about my son getting lice. mainly because he and I have the thickest hair ever seen and if we had to use that tiny comb over every strand of hair, it would take 2 days to do it on each person, so I've been saving every piece of info I can find about head lice and the alternative treatments. I too am NOT a fan of the insecticide method. I will try anything to avoid that. But one thing I won't do is let him ever infect other kids while I'm waiting for something to work.

I hear of these people who have them off and on for years and I think of all the people they've shared those nits with during that time.

Thanks so much for sharing. I am printing and filing! "

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