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Head lice are getting harder to kill. Here’s how to break the nit cycle

Head lice are getting harder to kill. Here’s how to break the nit cycle

Wrangling head lice, and the children they infest, must be up there with the most challenging duties a parent or carer has to face. And the job is getting harder.

Com­mon­ly used chem­i­cal prod­ucts aren’t work­ing as well as they once did, mean­ing head lice are hard­er to kill.

You can still rid your chil­dren of lice – but it’s like­ly to take some patience and persistence.

Remind me, what are head lice? And nits?

Head lice are tiny six-legged insects that are only found in the hair on a human’s head – most com­mon­ly in the hair of pri­ma­ry school-aged children.

Head lice have been a con­stant com­pan­ion for humans through­out their mil­lions of years of evolution.

Lice love liv­ing in our hair. But they scoot down to our scalp up to a half dozen times a day to drink our blood.

Their claws are per­fect­ly designed to scut­tle up and down shafts of hair. But while they’re nim­ble on our hair, once they’re off, they don’t last long –they’re clum­sy, unco­or­di­nat­ed and die quickly.

The term “nits” actu­al­ly describes the eggs of head lice. They’re often the first sign of an infes­ta­tion. And with one louse lay­ing more than 100 in their month-long lifes­pan, there can be a lot of them.

file 20250226 32 h6at8z.jpg?ixlib=rb 4.1
Head lice live for around a month.
logika600/Shutterstock

Can they spread diseases?

No. Head lice are annoy­ing and their bites may cause skin reac­tions. But Aus­tralian health author­i­ties don’t con­sid­er lice a health risk. There is no evi­dence that head lice can spread pathogens that cause disease.

The stig­ma of head lice infes­ta­tions can be greater than any direct health con­se­quences for infest­ed children.

Why do my children always pick up lice?

From child care through to pri­ma­ry school, it’s like­ly your child has had a head lice infes­ta­tion at least once. One Aus­tralian study found the infes­ta­tion rate in Aus­tralian class­rooms ranged from no cas­es to 72% of chil­dren affected.

Girls are more like­ly to be car­ry head lice than boys. Long hair means it’s eas­i­er for the head lice to hitch a ride.

Children work in class
One study found that in some class­rooms, almost three in four chil­dren had head lice.
CDC/Unsplash

Head lice don’t jump or fly, they move from head to head via direct contact.

Head lice come home with your chil­dren because they spend time in close con­tact with oth­er chil­dren, hug­ging, play­ing or crowd­ing around books or screens. Any head-to-head con­tact is a path­way of infections.

Rules dif­fer slight­ly between states but in New South Wales and Queens­land, chil­dren don’t need to be kept home from school because of head lice.

How can I keep my home free of head lice?

Keep­ing the house clean and tidy won’t keep head lice away. They don’t care how clean your bed sheets and tow­els are, or how fre­quent­ly you vac­u­um car­pets and rugs.

There may be a risk of head lice trans­fer on shared pil­lows, but even that risk is low.

There’s no need to change the child’s or oth­er fam­i­ly member’s bed­ding when you find lice in a child’s hair. Research-based rec­om­men­da­tions from NSW Health are that “bed linen, hats, cloth­ing and fur­ni­ture do not har­bour or trans­mit lice or nits and that there is no ben­e­fit in wash­ing them as a treat­ment option”.

I’ve used nit solution. Why isn’t it working?

A wide range of prod­ucts are avail­able at your local phar­ma­cy to treat head lice. Australia’s Ther­a­peu­tic Goods Admin­is­tra­tion assess­es prod­ucts to ensure that they are both safe and effective.

The prob­lem is that most of these prod­ucts are insec­ti­cides that kill the lice on con­tact but may not kill the eggs.

Also, if treat­ments aren’t com­plet­ed as direct­ed on prod­uct labels, some head lice won’t be killed.

Head lice also seem to be fight­ing back against the chem­i­cals we’ve been using against them and it’s get­ting hard­er to clear chil­dren of infestations.

So how can you get rid of them?

Mum combs child's hair
You’ll need con­di­tion­er and a nit comb.
riopatuca/Shutterstock

Don’t expect any mir­a­cle cures but health author­i­ties in Aus­tralia gen­er­al­ly rec­om­mend the “con­di­tion­er and comb” or “wet comb” method. This means you phys­i­cal­ly remove the lice with­out the need for chem­i­cal applications.

There are three key steps:

  1. immo­bilise the lice by apply­ing hair con­di­tion­er to the child’s damp hair and leav­ing it there for around 20 minutes
  2. sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly comb through the hair using a fine toothed “lice comb”. The con­di­tion­er and lice can be wiped off on paper tow­els or tis­sues. Only adult lice will be col­lect­ed but don’t wor­ry, we’ll deal with the eggs later
  3. repeat the process twice, about a week apart, to break the life cycle of the head lice.

Repeat­ing the process after a week allows the remain­ing eggs to hatch. It sounds counter-intu­itive but by let­ting them hatch, the young lice are eas­i­er to remove than the eggs. You just need to remove them before they start lay­ing a fresh batch of eggs and the infes­ta­tion continues.

While chil­dren are much more like­ly to have head lice, the real­i­ty is that every­one in the house­hold is just as like­ly to host a head louse or two. You don’t nec­es­sar­i­ly need every­one to have a treat­ment but “grown ups” should be on the look­out for lice too.The Conversation

Cameron Webb, Clin­i­cal Asso­ciate Pro­fes­sor and Prin­ci­pal Hos­pi­tal Sci­en­tist at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy and Uni­ver­si­ty of Sydney

This arti­cle is repub­lished from The Con­ver­sa­tion under a Cre­ative Com­mons license. Read the orig­i­nal arti­cle.

Fond memories of 46 years in healthcare

Lynne Coleman began work as a clerical cadet in the late 1970s at Royal Newcastle Hospital. As retirement beckons, she looks back on an incredible career that included an earthquake, a royal visit and the start of our statewide pathology service.

On 6 Feb­ru­ary 1979, at bare­ly 17 years of age, Lynne began her career as a Cler­i­cal Cadet at Roy­al New­cas­tle Hos­pi­tal – a hot­ly con­test­ed job at the time.

“I was one of 12 can­di­dates select­ed from 720 appli­ca­tions after an entrance exam and two rounds of inter­views,” she remembers.

“We were drilled in spelling, Eng­lish, maths, type­writ­ing, basic phys­i­ol­o­gy and med­ical ter­mi­nol­o­gy and made to recog­nise every form in use in the hospital.

“We learned phone num­bers by rote and were giv­en pho­tographs of key personnel.

“When I grad­u­at­ed from the Cler­i­cal Train­ing School I was assigned to the Per­son­nel Depart­ment before com­menc­ing in Clin­i­cal Chem­istry at Roy­al New­cas­tle Hos­pi­tal in March 1983.”

Lynne recalls that it was around that time she first met NSW Health Pathology’s Judy Kemp­ton-Webb and Scott Jans­son who were both work­ing in the Haema­tol­ogy Department.

“They were great times, a fierce but friend­ly rival­ry exist­ed between the two depart­ments. The Biochem Boomers (Chem­istry) and the RNH Clots (Haem) com­pet­ed against each oth­er at the annu­al Mat­tara Fes­ti­val Cor­po­rate Games.”

At the end of 1989 came the New­cas­tle earth­quake, and Lynne remem­bers unprece­dent­ed admin­is­tra­tive chal­lenges for staff as patients were relo­cat­ed to sur­round­ing hos­pi­tals with very lit­tle in the way of elec­tron­ic records.

“It was an incred­i­ble time. In the after­math, when the city was com­ing to terms with the destruc­tion, a 27-year-old me was cho­sen to meet HRH Prince Edward when he vis­it­ed RNH as the Queen’s representative.”

A black and white photo of a group of women smiling at HRH Prince Edward.
HRH Prince Edward meet­ing health work­ers in New­cas­tle includ­ing Lynne (cen­tre). (pho­to cour­tesy of the New­cas­tle Herald)

In 1990, Lynne became the Cler­i­cal Ser­vices Man­ag­er for what was then HAPS (Hunter Area Pathol­o­gy Ser­vice which lat­er became known as Pathol­o­gy North) and worked with some of the orig­i­nal lead­er­ship team at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy, includ­ing found­ing Chief Exec­u­tive Tracey McCosker, for­mer Chief Med­ical Infor­ma­tion Offi­cer Dr Stephen Braye and Maree Glee­son (for­mer NSWHP Board member)

In 2012 she was appoint­ed as Dr Braye’s Exec­u­tive Assis­tant when he was the Net­work Direc­tor of Pathol­o­gy North. Lynne moved to the New­cas­tle Office of NSWHP in 2017 when Stephen took on the role of Exec­u­tive Direc­tor Statewide Clin­i­cal Ser­vice and lat­er CMIO.

“That move took me back to the grounds of the old Roy­al New­cas­tle, so I had come full cir­cle,” she said.

“In 2018 I joined Judy Kemp­ton-Webb and her team in Pre and Post Ana­lyt­i­cal and Collections.

“In 2020 dur­ing COVID I found myself coor­di­nat­ing the pack­ing and dis­tri­b­u­tion of test kits, posters and request forms to sup­port our many col­lec­tion sites statewide.

“Col­lec­tive­ly there was some­thing in the order of 100,000 kits packed and sent from the New­cas­tle office.”

Two women in an office surrounded by packaging.
The ‘Swab Squad’: Lynne (right) and Aun­ty Joy pack­ing test kits in the New­cas­tle office.

“I’ve lived through the tran­si­tion from man­u­al office pro­ce­dures to the tech­nolo­gies of today and seen the trans­for­ma­tion of pathol­o­gy from indi­vid­ual hos­pi­tal depart­ments into what is now a statewide pathol­o­gy service.

“I am for­tu­nate to have spent my life work­ing in Health, and par­tic­u­lar­ly with NSW Health Pathol­o­gy. It has afford­ed me the oppor­tu­ni­ty to live my life well, pro­vide for my fam­i­ly and secure my future in retirement.

“It has been an incred­i­ble jour­ney, with twists and turns along the way but one with many fond mem­o­ries made and friend­ships formed. The peo­ple are the back­bone of our organ­i­sa­tion and I am proud to say I have been part of such a com­mit­ted and pro­fes­sion­al team.

“Not bad for a kid who turned up on the wrong day for the entrance exam!”

Lynne tells us she will enjoy some much need­ed down-time as she begins her retire­ment but has plans to trav­el with a cruise or two and a trip to the Antarc­tic on her buck­et list.

Hap­py retire­ment Lynne – you will be missed!

Meet our Gosford trainees!

Tayla Ferguson and Logan Chapman began traineeships at NSW Health Pathology’s Gosford laboratory in 2024. They’re both excited about a future career in healthcare.

Logan (pic­tured above right) began a trainee­ship in Col­lec­tions at Gos­ford in June 2024, hav­ing pre­vi­ous­ly worked in hair­dress­ing and aged care.

She says after spend­ing a lot of time in hos­pi­tal after her son was born, she realised her career goals had changed, and she want­ed to work in hos­pi­tals to help people.

“I love work­ing here at Gos­ford and have learnt so much in a short time,” Logan said.

“It feels like a fam­i­ly, and I don’t want to leave.”

She says jug­gling full-time work and fam­i­ly has been a chal­lenge, but she’s had a great sup­port network.

“I’ve been sup­port­ed through­out my trainee­ship and I’m always will­ing to learn more. I love mak­ing patients smile and I feel like I am mak­ing a dif­fer­ence to their expe­ri­ence in the hospital.

“I love going to work every­day and now that I’ve com­plet­ed my Cer­tifi­cate III in Pathol­o­gy Col­lec­tion, I’ll be look­ing to get work in the hospital.”

Col­lec­tions Man­ag­er, Stacey McK­in­non says Logan was a per­fect fit for the Gos­ford col­lec­tions team.

“Logan clear­ly enjoyed all that she has learned, fin­ish­ing her TAFE units in just over 3 months,” Stacey said.

“It hasn’t been easy chang­ing careers and being a mum of 2, but Logan has tack­led the trainee­ship with ease.

“We are excit­ed to see where this trainee­ship takes her!”

Tay­la Fer­gu­son (pic­tured left) also began her trainee­ship at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy in June 2024, hop­ing it would be a great way to get expe­ri­ence work­ing in the health sys­tem and gain a qual­i­fi­ca­tion. She is cur­rent­ly study­ing a Cer­tifi­cate III in Pathol­o­gy Collection.

She’s always had a pas­sion for help­ing peo­ple and was inter­est­ed in nurs­ing or becom­ing a paramedic.

“I am so glad I did the trainee­ship as it has allowed me to work and study and see if I want to go down a nurs­ing or para­medic path­way,” she said.

“I now have a clear view of how to plan for my next steps with work and study.”

Tay­la will be qual­i­fied to con­tin­ue work­ing in pathol­o­gy and says it’s been a valu­able path­way into more study.

“I would rec­om­mend a trainee­ship to any­one. Espe­cial­ly before jump­ing into four years at uni if you are not quite sure what you want to do.”

Col­lec­tions train­er at Gos­ford, Claire Pad­gett, says Tay­la proved to be a fast learn­er, ask­ing lots of rel­e­vant ques­tions along the way.

“Tay­la came to us in her first year out of school, but she was keen to learn,” Claire said.

“She spent 8 weeks with us pri­or to start­ing TAFE, and in that short time Tay­la had learned to col­lect blood inde­pen­dent­ly, as well as gen­er­al admin duties with­in the clinic.

“She fits in real­ly well with the team and we wish her all the best with what­ev­er comes next.”

 

Award for exposing and expunging fake research

NSW Health Pathology’s Director of Biobanking – NSW Health Professor Jennifer Byrne has been announced as the recipient of the Australian Academy of Science’s 2025 David Vaux Research Integrity Award.

Launched in 2023, the award recog­nis­es indi­vid­u­als who have led efforts to fos­ter and pro­mote integri­ty in sci­ence. The award hon­ours Pro­fes­sor David Vaux AO FAA FAHMS, who has cham­pi­oned sci­en­tif­ic research integri­ty in Australia.

Pro­fes­sor Byrne has an inter­na­tion­al rep­u­ta­tion for find­ing prob­lem­at­ic research arti­cles. She began this work acci­den­tal­ly after notic­ing strange pat­terns in pub­lished can­cer papers.

Since then, she has sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly addressed the prob­lem of fake research by:
• co-cre­at­ing soft­ware to detect poten­tial­ly faked papers
• writ­ing to jour­nals request­ing respons­es to papers with crit­i­cal errors
• men­tor­ing stu­dents to research the issue
• rais­ing aware­ness of prob­lem­at­ic research in the media; and
• reg­u­lar­ly bring­ing togeth­er pub­lish­ers and researchers to dis­cuss the prob­lems and poten­tial solutions.

Her career has divert­ed from lab­o­ra­to­ry can­cer research to research integri­ty. In addi­tion to her role as Direc­tor of Biobank­ing over­see­ing the NSW Health Statewide Biobank, Pro­fes­sor Byrne heads the Pub­li­ca­tion and Research Integri­ty in Med­ical Research (PRIMeR) group at The Uni­ver­si­ty of Sydney.

“I’m delight­ed to have been cho­sen as the recip­i­ent of the 2025 David Vaux Fel­low­ship. I thank my col­leagues Pro­fes­sor Adri­an Bar­nett and Pranu­jan Path­men­dra for their nom­i­na­tion,” she said.

“This award recog­nis­es my team mem­bers in the PRIMeR group and would not have been pos­si­ble with­out fund­ing from the Unit­ed States Office of Research Integri­ty, the NHMRC and the Uni­ver­si­ty of Syd­ney. I look for­ward to vis­it­ing dif­fer­ent Aus­tralian research cen­tres dur­ing 2025–2026 and engag­ing with stu­dents and researchers at all career stages,” Pro­fes­sor Byrne said.

“I hope to raise aware­ness of con­tem­po­rary issues affect­ing sci­en­tif­ic pub­li­ca­tions, includ­ing research paper mills and unde­clared use of gen­er­a­tive arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence. I also look for­ward to par­tic­i­pat­ing in key dis­cus­sions of pub­li­ca­tion integri­ty at inter­na­tion­al con­fer­ences and bring­ing this knowl­edge back to Aus­tralian researchers and policymakers.”

Pro­fes­sor Byrne plans to use the award funds to give pre­sen­ta­tions on research integri­ty at dif­fer­ent cen­tres across Aus­tralia, where she will meet with ear­ly career researchers to dis­cuss their con­cerns about their careers and research integri­ty. She will also trav­el to inter­na­tion­al con­fer­ences to share her work with a broad­er audience.

Microbiologist and infectious diseases physician honoured for services to pathology

Our Local Pathology Director at Nepean Hospital Dr James Branley has been appointed a Member of the Order of Australia on the 2025 Australia Day Honour list, for his significant service to diagnostic pathology and medical administration.

This year’s Aus­tralia Day hon­ours list recog­nis­es 732 out­stand­ing and inspi­ra­tional Aus­tralians, with awards across three categories.

James Bran­ley is among 108 peo­ple who have been appoint­ed a Mem­ber of the Order of Aus­tralia (AM) and he has also been includ­ed in the COVID-19 Hon­our Roll.

“To be hon­est, I’m a bit embar­rassed to be sin­gled out in this way,” James said.

“But I am proud to have been able to use my skills to assist so many com­mu­ni­ties both here in Aus­tralia, and around the world.

“I’ve been priv­i­leged to be able to do this work and I hope I have made a difference.”

James, who is also a reservist with the Aus­tralian Defence Force, was instru­men­tal in the ear­ly days of our COVID-19 response, trav­el­ling to Wuhan, Chi­na to escort more than 270 Aus­tralians home via a tem­po­rary quar­an­tine cen­tre on Christ­mas Island. He helped set up and run the COVID-19 test­ing lab­o­ra­to­ry on the island.

A man sits in the cockpit of a plane wearing an AusMat uniform.
Dr James Bran­ley on the plane head­ing to Wuhan, Chi­na to pick up evac­uees in 2020.
A man wearing a face mask taking a selfie at a quarantine facility.
At the quar­an­tine facil­i­ty on Christ­mas Island.

As the pan­dem­ic con­tin­ued, James went on to estab­lish and oper­ate an ADF lab­o­ra­to­ry at Nepean Hos­pi­tal, pro­vid­ing cru­cial COVID-19 test­ing for mil­i­tary per­son­nel based in the Mid­dle East. He was lat­er deployed to the Mid­dle East to help man­age a COVID-19 out­break there.

Twen­ty years ago, he was among the first team to arrive in Aceh, Indone­sia just three days after the dev­as­tat­ing 2004 Box­ing Day tsuna­mi. He spent two har­row­ing weeks pro­vid­ing vital med­ical care to survivors.

James also served in East Tim­or with the Unit­ed Nations, assist­ed with Australia’s response to Samoa’s measles epi­dem­ic and pro­vid­ed sup­port to his local com­mu­ni­ty in Nepean dur­ing the Hawkes­bury Riv­er flood­ing in March 2021.

A man standing near floodwaters and SES volunteers.
Help­ing out dur­ing the March 2021 floods in the Hawkesbury/Nepean region.

James is a micro­bi­ol­o­gist and infec­tious dis­eases physi­cian who is the Head of the Depart­ment of Micro­bi­ol­o­gy and Infec­tious Dis­eases at Nepean Hos­pi­tal where he is active­ly involved in teach­ing and sup­port­ing med­ical stu­dents, post grad­u­ate spe­cial­ist trainees and infec­tion con­trol nurses.

As the Local Pathol­o­gy Direc­tor for Nepean Blue Moun­tains, he man­ages the pathol­o­gy ser­vice for the region and is respon­si­ble for ensur­ing the con­nect­ed­ness of pathol­o­gy with oth­er clin­i­cal ser­vices in the District.

Thanks for your years of ser­vice James. We’re so proud that you are part of our team here at NSW Health Pathology!

Australia Day honours for Forensic Biology and DNA guru

NSW Health Pathology’s former Operations Director Criminalistics, Sharon Neville, has been recognised for her outstanding public service in this year’s Australia Day Honours list.

Sharon Neville has been award­ed the Pub­lic Ser­vice Medal (PSM) for her con­tri­bu­tion over many decades to the NSW Health and Jus­tice systems.

Her work head­ing up the Crim­i­nal­is­tics lab­o­ra­to­ries at the Foren­sic & Ana­lyt­i­cal Sci­ence Ser­vice (FASS) at Lid­combe has made NSW a safer place by pro­vid­ing the high­est qual­i­ty foren­sic sci­ence to dis­rupt crime, min­imise the impact of illic­it drugs in the com­mu­ni­ty, sup­port the appre­hen­sion of per­pe­tra­tors and pro­vide answers for griev­ing fam­i­lies and vic­tims of crime.

Her exper­tise has been relied on by author­i­ties in NSW and sought after by oth­er juris­dic­tions around Aus­tralia and New Zealand.

A woman in a white lab coat holding a pipette working in a laboratory.
Sharon Neville in the lab­o­ra­to­ry in 2016 (Pho­to cred­it: Jonathan Ng, Dai­ly Telegraph)

Ms Neville over­saw test­ing in foren­sic biol­o­gy and DNA, illic­it drug analy­sis and chem­i­cal crim­i­nal­is­tics, sup­port­ing crim­i­nal and coro­nial inves­ti­ga­tions includ­ing sex­u­al assaults, homi­cides and iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of unknown human remains, and health ini­tia­tives that alert the com­mu­ni­ty to drug harms.

She was at the fore­front of new tech­nol­o­gy and man­aged the deliv­ery of projects includ­ing the imple­men­ta­tion of a com­plete end-to-end auto­mat­ed robot­ic DNA sam­ple pro­cess­ing, and the intro­duc­tion of inno­v­a­tive approach­es such as an auto­mat­ed sperm find­er util­is­ing arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence (a first for Australia).

These projects and oth­ers have trans­formed the Foren­sic Biol­o­gy and DNA Analy­sis lab into a world-leader.

Sharon also intro­duced new DNA typ­ing meth­ods to sup­port sex­u­al assault inves­ti­ga­tions, to iden­ti­fy com­pro­mised human remains and tech­nol­o­gy to pre­dict phys­i­cal traits such as eth­nic­i­ty, hair and eye colour. Onboard­ing this tech­nol­o­gy has made FASS amongst the most advanced foren­sic biol­o­gy and DNA ser­vices in the world.

She was instru­men­tal in the response to the trag­ic Hunter Val­ley bus crash pro­vid­ing expert DNA analy­sis required to iden­ti­fy all vic­tims to ensure return to their fam­i­lies in the short­est pos­si­ble time­frame. She was also part of a team of Aus­tralian foren­sic biol­o­gists sec­ond­ed with the Aus­tralian Fed­er­al Police to iden­ti­fy vic­tims of the 2004 Box­ing Day tsuna­mi in Thailand.

Sharon has stamped an indeli­ble imprint upon the foren­sic sci­ence land­scape in Aus­tralia and beyond.

Con­grat­u­la­tions from all of us here at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy on this incred­i­ble honour!

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