Guidelines for a Preschool Lice Prevention Program
It’s important for administrators to have a Head Check and Lice Prevention Plan, preferably before a case of head lice is reported or discovered at school. Record your plan in writing and share it with families at the beginning of the school year. Keep these questions in mind as you craft a plan:
- Will you require a “summer’s end” head check before school starts or before entering school—to minimize the number of students entering your building with lice? If so, consider setting up a special “head check” day where you bring in nurses or volunteers to check heads. Conduct the checks at least one week before school starts so families have time to treat heads before coming to school. Set up a policy for how to guide those who are found to have head lice.
- Who will check heads during the school year? How will you check them? If you don’t have a nurse or healthcare personnel, consider forming a volunteer group who is trained by a local doctor or nurse to check heads.
- What will be your “return to class” policy? Proof of treatment? Head check by a trained staff member to show there are “no nits”? Letter from home?
- Will you check heads on a regular basis throughout the school year? Decide the best way to check heads so as not to disrupt class or scare the children. Decide how parents will be informed if a child is diagnosed. Decide what children will do before parents pick them up (if you require it).
- Will you check heads only when a case is reported or found at school? If so, whom will you check: children in that class, classes with siblings, the whole school? Once reported or detected, be sure to have a trained staff member confirm the diagnosis, and later provide children with clearance to return to class.
