
Any evidence of lice was once reason for immediate dismissal from school, with no return until the student’s head was lice free. But “no-nit” policies have been dropped in favor of “nonexclusion” rules, prioritizing class time over any nuisance caused by the sesame seed-sized parasites.
That leniency, of late, is coming back to bite some schools.
Parents in Massachusetts, Texas, Ohio and Georgia are petitioning for their districts to go back to strict rules on nits and live lice. They blame recent outbreaks on the inclusive recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that allow students with live lice to remain in class. Before the start of this school year, the Hernando School District north of Tampa, Fla., acted to reinstate a policy that was abandoned in 2022.
“It’s a reinfestation, over and over and over,” says Shannon Rodriguez, who chairs the Hernando County School Board. In July, she told fellow board members that she has seen the vicious cycle among families. “What do you do as a parent? Put them back in school with the same kid or kids that are in the classroom who have [lice]? It’s just a never-ending battle.”
It’s hard to know whether more inclusive policies have anything to do with isolated outbreaks because there’s very little data on infestations. Public health officials see lice as a nuisance, not a health threat. Outside of small studies, data collection is scarce.
The latest estimates for annual infestations in the U.S. are broad and unreliable since so many cases go unreported. The CDC puts the number between 6 million and 12 million, mostly in preschoolers and elementary school-age children.
“It really is about education because there are so many myths and so many misunderstandings about lice out there,” says Cathryn Smith of the National Association of School Nurses chapter in Tennessee. “This isn’t a topic that most people talk about.”
The National Association of School Nurses and the American Academy of Pediatrics have supported nonexclusionary head lice management for years, dating back to at least 2002. But the recommendations were taken more seriously after the COVID-19 pandemic affirmed the importance of face-to-face schooling.
“I think that people are starting to realize the value of in-person school and that really anything that takes them out of that should be scrutinized,” Dr. Dawn Nolt of Oregon Health & Science University told NPR. “Head lice is not a valid reason to keep a kid out of school or be dismissed from school.”
Nolt authored the latest guidance issued by the American Academy of Pediatrics, in 2022, which incorporated new research but largely echoed prior versions. It discourages widespread lice checks in schools since a small study found that more often than not, lice are misidentified, which leads to unnecessary treatment.
The life cycle of lice also takes four to six weeks to become a full-blown infestation. Only then would a child be seen scratching their head uncontrollably, something caused by an allergic reaction to the lice saliva.
“Kicking them out on a Wednesday when they’ve been having it for the past four to six weeks is not going to do anything. But it’s going to take that kid out of school and shame that kid and shame that family,” Nolt says. “I just think that’s not acceptable.”
Inclusion is the priority, even if it may cause an inconvenience or financial cost for others. Over-the-counter remedies like creams, gels or shampoos add up. Professional treatment, which often involves manually picking out lice and nits, can run into the hundreds of dollars per person. And sometimes lice hit an entire household.
This summer, a preschool outside Nashville, Tenn., was hit with an outbreak like never before. Roughly a third of the kids at Creative Youth Enrichment Center ended up with lice.
Owner Tonya Bryson knew the latest recommendations are to play it cool. So she kept everyone in school, and they faced the dreaded four-letter word together. And then she talked about the experience openly.
“It’s not as bad as you think it is,” Bryson says. “I mean, yes, we had quite a few kids with it, and then it went to parents and siblings. But it’s manageable.”
Among the affected families was Stephanie Buck, who also teaches at the day care. Lice ran through her household, requiring pricey treatment to rid them all.
She’s torn about the best approach, balancing the shame and stigma with the practical matter of containing an outbreak.
“Because my daughter was really embarrassed when she found out that she was the first one who got checked and she had it,” Buck says. “It’s hard. You want to protect your babies’ hearts, but you also want to keep them from getting lice.”
This article comes from NPR’s reporting partnership with Nashville Public Radio and KFF Health News, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. KFF Health News is one of the core operating programs at KFF.
Copyright © 2025 WPLN
Transcript:
JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:
Pediatricians and public health officials say lice is low on the threats – the list of threats to public health, but it can feel like a big deal to the school systems and parents struggling with the idea of keeping kids with lice in class. Blake Farmer of member station WPLN in Nashville reports.
BLAKE FARMER, BYLINE: A lice infestation is an ordeal, especially at a preschool.
UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Hi.
EVELYN THOMPSON: Hey, girl. How’s your hair? Feeling OK?
FARMER: Evelyn Thompson knows how to disarm 4-year-olds so they forget she’s combing their hair looking for bloodsucking bugs the size of a sesame seed. Today, she’s checking her work, methodically parting the hair of children she treated a week ago.
EVELYN THOMPSON: She was the first one we identified in the group, and I promised her she wouldn’t be the only one.
TONYA BRYSON: And by the time we were finished, there were 13 children.
FARMER: Tonya Bryson owns the daycare Creative Youth Enrichment Center. When lice hit a third of her students, she knew the latest recommendations are to treat nits as a nuisance, not a public health threat, so they kept everyone in school and faced the dreaded four-letter word together.
BRYSON: It’s not as bad as you think it is. I mean, yes, we had quite a few kids with it, and it went to parents and siblings, but it’s manageable.
FARMER: If you grew up in the 1900s, no nits was the policy, and you were sent home until you had a clean bill of health. But 20 years ago, medical guidance shifted to let kids stay in school. At this point, when live lice are found, the recommendation is to simply notify parents. Cathryn Smith’s the president-elect of the Tennessee Association of School Nurses.
CATHRYN SMITH: They can come back to school for their education the next day. It’s more important that they’re in school learning than it is for them to be out of school because of lice.
FARMER: After all, they’re gross but essentially harmless. Lice don’t carry disease. They don’t jump or fly. So if little heads aren’t touching, lice are usually staying put. Plus, it takes weeks to go from one bug on a kid’s head to enough live lice to make them really itchy. Pediatrician Dawn Nolt, of Oregon Health and Science University, authored a widely cited paper in 2022 that spawned a flurry of schools revisiting their no-nit policies.
DAWN NOLT: Kicking them out on a Wednesday when they’ve been having it for the past four to six weeks is not going to do anything, but it’s going to take that kid out of school and shame that kid and shame that family. And I just think that that’s not acceptable.
FARMER: Inclusion is the priority, even if it may cause an inconvenience or even financial cost for others. Over-the-counter treatments like gels, creams and shampoos add up, and professional help can run into the hundreds of dollars since it could hit an entire household. Lice leniency is a tough sell, even for the experts.
NOLT: My child’s best friend canceled a playdate because that person had lice. I was like, it’s OK, just come. They were so embarrassed. And I said, OK, just get the treatment. We’ll see you next week.
FARMER: For school districts that dropped their no-nit policies, second thoughts are going around. Parents in Massachusetts, Texas, Ohio and Georgia are petitioning for their schools to get strict on nits, and school boards are listening. The school board in Hernando County, Florida, is reverting to their old rules. Chair Shannon Rodriguez said she’s seen families who treat their kids right away get lice again from the same outbreak because other families didn’t act.
SHANNON RODRIGUEZ: What do you do as a parent, put them back in school with the same kids that have it? It’s just a never-ending battle.
FARMER: Stephanie Buck teaches at the lively preschool in Nashville that’s getting over an infestation. She’s scarred.
(SOUNDBITE OF TOYS BANGING)
STEPHANIE BUCK: Because my daughter was really embarrassed when she found out that she was the first one who got checked and she had it. Man, it’s hard. You want to protect your babies’ hearts.
FARMER: But, she says, you also want to keep your babies lice-free, if you can. For NPR News, I’m Blake Farmer in Nashville.
SUMMERS: This story was produced in partnership with KFF Health News.
(SOUNDBITE OF JAKE XERXES FUSSELL SONG, “WASHINGTON”)