From the Progress Newsletter, Spring 1996. The National Pediculosis Association has issued an alert to warn American families. The NPA reports that a worst-case scenario is emerging, as head lice appear to be resistant to commercially available chemical treatments. With resistance to the prescription chemical lindane already documented, it is likely that the over-the-counter pediculicides have followed suit. Lice resistance to permethrin was anticipated in 1990 by doctors John D. Edman, Medical Entomologist and John M. Clark, Insecticide Toxicologist, both at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. For the past year, the NPA has been averaging 50 calls a day from parents and health professionals reporting product treatment failure. Frustrated parents have responded to persistent …
The Most Dangerous Medicine
Mothers have found that the cure can be worse than the complaint By Paula Lyons - Ladies Home Journal - June 1994 For years it was the most commonly prescribed treatment for two of the most vexing and distasteful problems of childhood, head lice and scabies. The treatment’s most recognizable brand name has been Kwell, though it is no longer manufactured under that name. Generically, it is known as lindane. And though it comes in lotion and shampoo form, lindane is actually a very strong pesticide. But parents rarely are aware of this, and they can learn too late that lindane can have the same effect on their children that it has on the insects they carry: In other words, it can attack and permanently damage the central nervous system. On June 10, 1993, Jean Nabors*, of Boise, …
Pediculosis Prevention Resolution Submitted to Congress
H.J. Res. 223 United States Conference of Mayors 1620 Eye Street, Northwest Washington, D.C. 20006 Telephone: (202)293-7330 April 8, 1985 The Honorable Barney Frank U.S. House of Representatives 1317 Longworth House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 Dear Congressman Frank, The U.S. Conference of Mayors enthusiastically supports the resolution you have introduced designating September 1985 as "Pediculosis Prevention Month." As the enclosed policy statement demonstrates, we have serious concerns about the potential health and social implications of pediculosis. Please feel free to call me or the Conference staff if we can provide further assistance …
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Brill’s Disease. IV. Study of 26 Cases in Yugoslavia
Department of Microbiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.; Doboj, Grac'anica, Tuzla, and Sarajevo, Yugoslavia; and Department of Microbiology, Harvard School of Public Health. IN 1934 Zinsser defined Brill's disease as sporadic typhus occurring in the absence of lice among immigrants to the United States from the typhus-ridden areas of southeastern Europe.1 Subsequently, physicians in Switzerland,2 France,3' 4 England,5 and Portugal6 reported occasional cases of Brill's disease among immigrants and displaced persons from the typhus regions of Europe. There are no reports, however, that Brill's disease has been recognized as such in any area where typhus fever actually occurs in epidemics among the local population. If Brill's disease is indeed a recrudescence of typhus …
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