Lice Sprays for Children's Bedding... an Unnecessary Evil
Responding to Newseek’s recent report on the decline of children’s health, the National Pediculosis Association (NPA) warns against the use of lice sprays marketed for children’s bedding. The NPA calls attention to lice sprays as an easily avoided, unnecessary risk to family health and safety.
(PRWEB) September 29, 2003 -- The cover of the September 22, 2003 issue of
Newsweek Magazine shows a little boy with an apple in his hand and the tag line
“Your Child’s Health and Safety,” the latest on allergies and asthma, childhood
depression, sleep, stress and more.
The magazine documents staggering
and increasing numbers of children with asthma, and visits to the emergency
room. It quotes Dr. Marc Rothenberg, director of allergy and immunology at
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital who said, “It’s not just that more kids have
allergies,” but the fact that “the severity of those allergies has also
increased.”
Newsweek’s report on declining children’s health was the
subject of a recent staff meeting at the National Pediculosis Association, (NPA)
with everyone finding the Newsweek statistics alarming, unfortunately not
surprising, and indicative of too many chemicals in a child’s life.
Ted
Schettler, MD, Gina Solomon, MD, MPH, et al in their book, Generations at Risk,
report that people not only assume that their physicians are able to diagnose
and treat environmentally related conditions, but they also assume that
government agencies are protecting them from environmental hazards.
The
book’s authors claim that government oversight of consumer products and other
industrial chemicals is generally poor. They tell the reader “the result is
human exposure to untested or poorly tested materials for economic and political
reasons.”
The list of potentially toxic exposures for children is
daunting. Chemical agents are often researched as though they are the only
chemical risk that occurs. Some appear even scientifically acceptable when
studied one at a time.
Such standards deny the realities of the world in
which we live and the seemingly endless number of chemical exposures that add up
fast for an individual child's body.
Pesticides are only one example.
There are undoubtedly situations where the benefit of pesticides may outweigh
the risks, but there are too many other situations when pesticides have become
an unnecessary evil.
At the basic level, most of the chemical agents
sold for treating head lice are not sufficiently effective either because they
never were, or because the lice have developed resistance to them. These are
pesticide risks without benefits.
The NPA was
incorporated in 1983 as a nonprofit organization to protect children from the
misuse and abuse of pesticides marketed for treating pediculosis, the medical
term for head lice infestation.
NPA's mission is also its mantra: “We
can’t remove every potentially harmful exposure from a child’s life, making it
imperative that we remove those that we can.”
September marked the 19th
annual Head Lice Prevention Campaign, which reached out to everyone to avoid
over-the-counter and prescription pesticides such as lindane or malathion, by
instead focusing efforts on education in advance of outbreaks, routine
screening, early detection and manual removal of all lice and nits.
The
NPA says enormous strides have been made, but potentially harmful products
remain on the drug store shelves.
Just about every OTC pesticide shampoo
brand offers an environmental lice spray.
RID,the biggest selling brand
name has a can of spray carrying the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. The
product’s active ingredient is listed as permethrin, a pesticide already
associated with asthma and to which head lice are known to be resistant.
Major drug chains also carry their own private label lice sprays for
bedding. The Walgreens' brand touts its spray as having residual activity that
“controls pests for up to four weeks.”
The prominence of lice sprays on
the shelf sends a message to the consumer that they are necessary!
Lice
sprays are reportedly inexpensive to produce and therefore very profitable.
Frantic consumers are known to purchase several cans at a time figuring one
won't be enough for all the bedding, furniture and rooms in the house.
It is unlikely that the physicians who think of head lice as a nuisance,
rather than an infectious disease, would fathom that a child with asthma,
breathing or sleeping difficulties might have been shampooed with pesticides and
tucked in at night to sleep on a mattress and pillow sprayed with a pesticide.
Although the information on spray labels advise those with asthma or
severe allergies to “consult their doctor before using this product and have
someone else apply this product,” there is no warning for the kids with asthma
or allergies, whose beds will be sprayed.
There is however an ironic
general directive to “keep out of reach of children.”
There are also no
warnings for mothers such as the one from Minnesota who called the NPA on
September 16th tearfully pleading for help after she had used several of the
lice shampoos without success.
She also bought several cans of the
environmental sprays and sprayed all of the bedding and furniture in her home.
This is a mother of 4, the youngest of which is a nursing infant. There were no
warnings for her.
The National Coalition Against the Misuse of
Pesticides, (NCAMP) says there is no safe way for a nursing mother to apply or
spray pesticides, let alone protect her baby from the environment or very real
possibility of contaminated breast milk.
There
is however a safe alternative with the simple use of the household vacuum. Head
lice require human blood and are human parasites as opposed to environmental
pests.
They are primarily transmitted by person-to-person contact, and
while particular areas, such as the couch where the kids gather to watch
television, may lend themselves to helping lice make their way from one human
host to another, it is best to vacuum, not spray!
Vacuuming is
effective, realistic, practical, safe and a readily available action to take for
areas such as furniture, bedding, car seats, stuffed animals, etc. Vacuuming
also eliminates the outdated labor-intensive "bagging" of such items. Clothing
and bed linen can be washed.
Facts:
· The
harmful effects of pediculicide sprays (including eye and respiratory risks)
apply not only to the children but also to the parent doing the spraying and to
household pets.
. Young children, the most
susceptible age group to head lice, often have mothers who may be pregnant or
nursing: the sprays come with no warnings for the even higher risk group -
infants, unborn babies, or others with pre-existing medical problems living in
the home.
· Lice sprays are marketed to be used “in
concert” with lice shampoos, and therefore significantly increase the
insecticide exposures without any regard for combined effects, cumulative
absorption or safety.
. Lice sprays for bedding
and furniture are unique in that they are regulated by the EPA but packaged with
FDA regulated pesticide shampoos and lotions.
·
Pediculicidal sprays have ingredients that become more toxic in their vaporized
state.
· The ineffectiveness of lice sprays is
documented in scientific studies of lice resistance to permethrin and
cross-resistance to other pesticides found in the most widely available
treatment products.
· Schools that spray pesticides for
lice add risks for their student population given that parents are often not
informed of the school spraying and repeat similar actions within the home.
· Cumulative risks also occur when schools and other
institutions spray for other pests such as ticks, mosquitoes and roaches.
· Selling pesticide sprays for children’s bedding
risks children’s health and exploits their parents and their pocketbooks at a
time of high anxiety. The more conscientious the unwarned parents, the more
likely it is that they will spray everything in the house.
Lice sprays
can affect everyone but especially the vulnerable childhood population to which
Newsweek dedicated its September 22, 2003 issue.
These are the same
children the NPA has brought attention to through Jesse’s Project, -- children
already suffering with more asthma, more cancer, more allergies, more epilepsy,
more learning problems and more illness in general.
Ours is a strange
society where we are now required to post signs on lawns after they have been
treated with pesticides to be sure children do not play there ...while pesticide
sprays continue to be sold for children's beds.
This news
release is part of the National Head Lice Prevention Campaign in support of
Jesse’s Project and the Boss Louse educational video, sponsored by the National
Pediculosis Association, a non profit organization.
The NPA also has a
National Reporting Registry for those who think the use of treatments for head
lice may have been associated with an adverse reaction. www.headlice.org.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2003/9/prweb82081.htm