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Forum
-> Parenting our children
-> School age children
amother
Lemon
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Tue, Jun 26 2018, 9:28 pm
amother wrote: | Refer to my post from yesterday, 11:29 pm. I gave you an article citing.
"Never ever" is strong wording. Are you sure? |
Post the text please.
Your child was found to have nits.
The abstract of the citation that you provided discusses how Health care professionals as well as nonspecialists frequently overdiagnose pediculiasis capitis and generally fail to distinguish active from extinct infestations.
Your child wasn't found to have a lice infestation (pediculiasis capitis) she was found to have nits.
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amother
Amethyst
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Tue, Jun 26 2018, 9:33 pm
amother wrote: | Apparently they look somewhat alike because according to this article that was references by another author, Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2000 Aug;19(8):689-93; discussion 694, only 32% of specimens sent in to the authors as "example of infestation" deemed by supposedly "trained professional" were actually accurate. Meaning, 68% were inaccurate. As in the "lice checkers" who thought something was lice, were wrong in 68% of the time. |
Can you link the article? The only thing I'm seeing is that they had a hard time distinguishing between active and dead nits. Also that these specimans were given by ordinary ppl and health care professionals. I dont see anything about lice checkers who do this day in day out for a living.
Maybe I'm looking at the wrong article.
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