Head Louse
Pediculus humanus capitis
In commercial contexts, head lice are primarily a concern for schools, childcare centres, camps, and sports organisations where large numbers of children interact in close physical contact.
For these organisations, head lice represent a public health management challenge, a staff training and communication responsibility, and a potential source of parental complaint if not handled sensitively and effectively. Healthcare providers, professional nit-removal services, and pharmacies are also commercially involved in the management of head lice cases.
For all commercial operators in direct physical contact with hair (hairdressers, barbers, cosmeticians), head lice represent an occupational exposure risk that should be addressed through standard hygiene protocols for tools and protective equipment.
Habitat
In school and childcare settings, the ‘habitat’ of head lice from an institutional management perspective is the active infestation on individual children — not the building environment.
Environmental disinfection of classrooms and childcare spaces is not necessary or recommended by public health authorities for head lice management, as lice die within 1–2 days off a host. The institution’s role is in detection, notification, and education — not environmental treatment.
Shared fabric items such as dress-up clothes, shared pillows at rest time, and costume pieces should be laundered or sealed in a plastic bag for 48 hours as a standard hygiene measure.
Active Areas
Windsor
Head lice are moderately common throughout Windsor's school-age population. All neighbourhoods are equally affected regardless of socioeconomic character. Seasonal peaks in September–October and January–February track school-year contact patterns.
Tecumseh
Moderate head lice prevalence among school-age children in Tecumseh, consistent with the regional pattern.
LaSalle
Moderate prevalence among school-age children in LaSalle, consistent with the regional baseline.
Amherstburg
Moderate head lice prevalence in Amherstburg's school-age population.
Lakeshore
Moderate prevalence consistent with the regional school-age population baseline.
Essex
Moderate head lice prevalence among school-age children in the Town of Essex.
Kingsville
Moderate prevalence consistent with the regional baseline.
Leamington
Moderate head lice prevalence among school-age children in Leamington, consistent with the regional pattern.
Chatham-Kent
Moderate prevalence in school-age populations across Chatham-Kent. School and childcare settings experience recurring outbreaks.
St. Thomas
Moderate prevalence. A common concern in schools and childcare facilities throughout St. Thomas.
Seasonality
Commercially, head lice management in schools and childcare settings is most active during the academic year — September through June.
September is typically the highest-volume period for professional nit removal services and pharmacy pediculicide sales, as newly detected infestations from the summer holidays and early school contact are identified. Institutions should reinforce lice awareness communications to parents at the start of each school term and when cases are identified.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Appearance
Professional lice screeners and healthcare practitioners should focus inspection on the areas of densest nit attachment: behind the ears, at the nape of the neck, and at the crown.
Using a fine-toothed nit comb on wet, conditioned hair under good lighting is the most sensitive detection method. Fluorescent black light (UV light) causes nits to fluoresce — a useful adjunct to visual inspection in professional settings.
The distinction between viable nits (within 6 mm of scalp, tan-coloured) and empty casings (further from scalp, white) is important for accurately assessing the severity and recency of an infestation.
- Six legs each tipped with a strong curved claw precisely adapted for gripping individual human hair shafts
- No wings — head lice cannot fly or jump, and spread exclusively through direct head-to-head contact
- Nits (eggs) are tiny oval capsules — approximately 0.8 mm — pale white to grey, firmly cemented to individual hair shafts close to the scalp with a waterproof adhesive that makes them impossible to flick off (unlike dandruff flakes)
- Intense itching especially behind the ears and at the nape of the neck — caused by an allergic reaction to louse saliva injected during feeding
- Lice are pale tan to grey-white; they may appear darker when recently fed due to the ingested blood showing through the translucent body
Behaviour
From a public health management perspective in schools and childcare centres, it is important to recognise that the ‘no-nit’ policy — excluding children until all nits are removed — is no longer recommended by the Canadian Paediatric Society or Public Health Ontario.
Current guidance supports keeping children in school while treatment is in progress, given the low risk of transmission through non-contact routes and the evidence that nit-only infestations (no live lice) are often post-treatment remnants rather than active infestations.
School nurses and public health practitioners should apply the most current provincial guidance when communicating with parents and developing school lice management policies.
Lifecycle
Female head lice lay 6–10 nits per day, gluing each one individually to a hair shaft close to the scalp using a biologically produced adhesive. Over a lifetime of 25–30 days, a single female produces approximately 80–100 nits. Nits hatch in 7–10 days; the hatched nymph begins feeding immediately and passes through three nymphal instars over 9–12 days before reaching adulthood. Adult lice live approximately 25–30 days on the host. Total generation time from egg to reproductive adult is approximately 16–21 days — rapid enough for an infestation to become established quickly from a single transfer event.
Egg / Nit
Professional nit detection in schools and childcare settings should focus on viable nits within 6 mm of the scalp. Empty casing (white shells) that are further from the scalp indicate previous infestation that may have already been treated.
Public health guidance from Ontario’s local health units advises against sending children home on the basis of empty casings alone — only active infestation (live lice or viable nits) warrants notification and treatment.
Commercial nit-removal services should be able to distinguish viable from empty nits and communicate this distinction clearly to clients.
Nymph
Professional nit removal services working with clients following pediculicide treatment should conduct a follow-up combing session at 7–10 days post-treatment to remove any nymphs that have hatched from nits that were not killed or removed during the first treatment.
This is the most critical quality control step in professional lice management and is the most common point of failure in DIY treatment attempts.
Adult
Professional lice management services should document the detection of adult lice as confirmation of active infestation in client assessment records.
Treatment records should include: detection method, products applied, timing of follow-up appointment, and outcome assessment. For schools and childcare institutions, health unit reporting requirements for lice cases should be followed as per current Ontario Ministry of Health guidance.
Signs You May Have a Problem
- Multiple children in the same class or group presenting with itching and scalp scratching within a short timeframe — suggests active transmission within the group
- A child or parent reporting a confirmed lice diagnosis to school or childcare staff
- Visible nits found during a routine lice check performed by a school nurse or designated staff member
- Reports from multiple parents of children in the same cohort identifying lice or nits following close-contact activities (sleepovers, group sports, drama productions)
- Hairdressers or cosmeticians detecting nits during routine service — firm attachment to hair shafts distinguishes nits from product residue
- Requests for same-day professional nit-removal appointments clustering from families in the same school or neighbourhood
Risks & Concerns
For schools and childcare centres, head lice cases create communication management demands — informing affected families, class notifications, and navigating parental anxiety — that place a burden on administrative and teaching staff.
Mismanaged communication can lead to community anxiety disproportionate to the actual health risk. Healthcare liability for childcare operators is minimal given the absence of disease transmission, but failure to follow provincial public health guidance on lice management protocols can expose operators to criticism and parental complaints.
For professional nit removal services, occupational exposure during client treatment is mitigated by standard barrier precautions — wearing gloves during combing sessions and laundering capes between clients.
Prevention
- Implement a written head lice management policy aligned with current Ontario public health guidance, including detection procedures, parent notification templates, and return-to-school criteria
- Train all staff in performing basic lice detection screening and in communicating sensitively with parents about lice cases
- Conduct class-wide notification (without identifying the affected child) when a lice case is confirmed, following Public Health Ontario guidance on privacy and notification
- Maintain up-to-date parent education materials on lice treatment and home management procedures at the school office
- For hairdressers and cosmeticians, use disposable cape covers between clients and use heat-sanitised combs and brushes to manage occupational exposure risk
DIY Control
- Schools and childcare centres should not attempt to perform treatment on children — direct parents to consult their pharmacist or physician and refer to the institution's written lice management policy
- Recommend that parents use the pharmacist consultation service when selecting pediculicide products, as resistance patterns and product recommendations evolve
Professional Control
- Professional nit removal clinics can partner with schools and childcare centres to provide on-site or clinic-based screening and treatment services during active outbreaks
- Pest management professionals are not the appropriate service provider for head lice in most commercial settings — healthcare practitioners, pharmacists, and professional nit removal technicians are the relevant experts for human lice infestations
Frequently Asked Questions
How do head lice spread?
Head lice are not typically a commercial pest concern except in childcare settings, schools, and residential care facilities. In these settings, a clear communication and management protocol for identified cases is important.
Do head lice live in furniture or bedding for long?
In childcare settings, any shared items that cannot be washed (soft toys, rest mats) can be sealed in a plastic bag for 48 hours. Extensive environmental treatment is not justified by the 24–48 hour off-host survival time.
How do I treat head lice at home?
In childcare or residential care settings, affected individuals should be treated by parents or caregivers using pharmacist-recommended products.
Professional pest control is not typically the appropriate response to head lice — public health nurse involvement is more appropriate.
Does everyone in the household need to be treated for head lice?
In institutional settings, follow the guidance of your local public health unit. Mass treatment of all contacts without individual confirmation is generally not recommended.
What are nits and how do I remove them?
Nit removal by fine-tooth combing is typically the responsibility of parents or caregivers, not facility staff. Provide parents with clear information on nit identification and combing technique when a case is identified.
Do head lice spread disease?
Head lice are a nuisance and social concern rather than a disease risk. Communicate this clearly to affected families to reduce stigma and anxiety.
Is it true that lice prefer dirty hair?
Communicating this fact clearly to parents and caregivers is important to reduce stigma and encourage prompt reporting of cases in institutional settings.