If you have kids, you probably have sufffered a plague or two. What do I mean? Well, I am thinking of one month during which our family suffered fleas, mice, and flies in the house, all at once. My mom joked that it was like the plagues of Egypt! And she wasn't wrong.
The more kids you have, the harder it is to get rid of some of these, because they pass things among themselves. Sometimes we've gone months where we can't meet up with anybody because we've all got something contagious. Venture out just once, and we bring home something else! This is one of those times; we've had colds, fevers, and sore throats circulating among us since school started. It's pretty horrible, but on the bright side -- it's not vomiting!
Here are the ten plagues I know most about. None of this constitutes an admission that we've had any of these! I admit, some of these are nasty and embarrassing. But that's all the more reason to find out what they are and how to deal with them before they happen to you.
1. Ants
Let's start out with something not too scary: ants. I hate them, especially if they get on me. Nothing like sitting on the ground and then finding out you sat on an anthill. But in the house, they're more an annoyance than a threat. You find lines of them getting under your door or through the cracks in your window frame, and they just keep coming back.
How to prevent them: Don't leave food around. Easier said than done! It's a good policy to keep food contained in the kitchen and dining room only, not all over the house, especially not in carpeted areas where it's hard to clean the crumbs. Store food in places the ants can't get to, like in the fridge or in sealed containers. We keep pet food in sealed pails because the ants were getting into it when we left it in the bag.
How to get rid of them: For an occasional ant trail, wipe down the area where they are walking. This erases the chemical trail they lay, so they aren't able to find their way back where they were. The best thing for this is probably citrus vinegar -- vinegar you've soaked citrus peels in for a week or more. Ants hate it and run like crazy if you spray it near them.
For a more serious problem, those little plastic ant traps are the best. They have poison, but the poison doesn't touch any of your stuff. Still, keep them out of reach of curious toddlers. You can put them out at night, inside cupboards, or on counters where ants have been spotted.
If there's a certain spot you are always finding them, you might consider sealing the cracks if possible. Or, if there's a nest very close to your door, you could pour water on it steadily for a day or two (leave the hose trickling on the nest), making it an inhospitable spot for them. I had great luck with this when the nest was inside a flower box outside.
2. Fruit flies
How to prevent: Again, don't leave food out! If you keep tomatoes on the counter (which you should, they aren't good refrigerated), check them daily and use or throw away any that has cracked skin. The same goes for any other room-temperature food, especially fruits and vegetables. If you have a frequent problem, you might want to confine fruit to inside a cupboard or under a cloth. Take out the trash every couple of days, even if it's not full, and throw out a compost bucket daily.
How to cure: Clean up all food fragments. Sweep the floor and wipe down the counters. Pour boiling water down your drains, because they like to breed down there (ew!). Then make a fruit fly trap: one piece of fruit or some fruit juice or cider vinegar, in a jar of water, with a squirt of dish soap. You don't need to cover the container; when the fruit flies land on the water to taste it, the dish soap makes them sink. You'll see them at the bottom of your jar.
3. Mice
Our old house was prone to mice. I'm not scared of mice, but I didn't like finding their droppings in my silverware drawer either. A couple of them, I was able to catch with oven mitts on (you don't want to risk them biting you) but in the end I had to resort to traps.
How to know you have them: Little black droppings like black tic-tacs are an obvious sign. So are chewed holes in food packages. You may not see any mice at all, but if you have these signs, you have mice.
How to prevent: Block up holes leading into your house. Our weak point was the gap around the oil pipe leading into our basement. Some expanding foam took care of that easily. You can also plug any mouse holes you find within the house, where they might hide or travel from room to room.
How to cure: Those cheap spring traps are really the best option. Poison is dangerous to have around, and you run the risk the mice will die inside your walls. The smell is unbearable when this happens, and you basically have to wait for a month or so while the corpse rots away. Don't do it! Get the spring traps from the hardware store and put them out, with a bit of peanut butter on the pedal, wherever you saw mice. When you find a mouse in one, it will probably be dead (they usually kill instantly, which is at least humane) but if it isn't, you'll have to put on heavy gloves to handle it. It's up to you what you do with it at that point, but let me warn you -- if you catch and release, and you haven't blocked all your holes, the cute little mousey will be right back in your kitchen with its uncute droppings by tomorrow.
4. Fleas
Fleas are both unpleasant and embarrassing. You don't want to have friends over and have them discover you have fleas -- much less carry them home! But if your pets are bringing them in, they can get out of control before you even notice them.
How to know you have them: A pet who has fleas will scratch a lot. You may not see any fleas, but if you brush the pet over a light-colored surface, black "dirt" will fall out of their coat. Get the "dirt" wet, and it turns a rusty color. That's the flea's poop, which contains your pet's blood. If you see it, it's a sure thing, whether or not you see any fleas. A flea infestation may also be discovered when you find bites. They are red, flat circles, often in a pattern, like the flea was grazing along your leg. If you're awake when you get them, flea bites sting. Later, they itch.
How to prevent: Talk to your vet about the best flea prevention for your pet. The drop-on-the-back-of-the-neck kinds are really effective, but they can make your pet sick, and they're not safe for children who snuggle the animal either. Frequent flea baths and combing are toxin-free. Simplest of all is to keep your cats inside and walk your dogs instead of letting them roam outside. If your pet picks up fleas in your yard, it is possible to get the yard sprayed for them. If your pet always sleeps on the same bedding, wash it weekly.
How to get rid of them: Oh, we tried so many things, in an effort to stay all-natural. We swept, we vacuumed. The eggs and larvae hatch and grow in the environment, not on the pet, so if you can keep them out of the environment, the cycle will be broken. However, that's pretty near impossible to do. We stripped all the beds and put all bedding and rugs in the laundry room. Started washing and drying the stuff, only to find out that heat and humidity (which was put out by the dryer) triggers hatching. Within a day there were fleas so thickly in the laundry room that to go in there, you had to pull socks on over your pants to avoid having them go up your clothes. Then when you came out you had to rip off all your clothes and throw them back in the laundry room, because they were hopping with fleas. It was a nightmare. We dumped diatomaceous earth, we made traps with lightbulbs shining into bowls, and these things only made tiny dents in the problem. So in the end we turned to chemicals. This is the stuff: Ultracide. You spray it on all the carpets and upholstery and baseboards, then spray again a week later when the eggs hatch. It's not supposed to be toxic for humans, but I did take the kids out of the house for awhile while John sprayed. It worked immediately and (perhaps in part thanks to many miserable baths for the cat and dog, and much flea-combing) the fleas never returned.
5. Pinworms
These are disgusting, but they say most kids get them at least once. So try to make it through this section, because you're going to need to know. Children ingest the eggs, and the worms live in their gut for about 1-2 months before starting to lay their eggs at night on the child's anus, causing intense itching and sleeplessness. They aren't harmful except for the itching, but you should still treat them immediately so you don't spread them to other children.
How to prevent them: Have children wash hands after playing in playgrounds or other public areas. Encourage kids not to suck thumbs, pick noses, or bite nails. The eggs stay on surfaces, and children who are always touching their mouths will ingest them. Direct contact isn't necessary for them to be infected.
How to know you have them: Children will wake up screaming at night and wailing that their butts itch. If more than one kid is doing it and you don't see rashes, I'd consider that a positive diagnosis on its own. But a doctor can look for eggs with swab and a microscope. You won't see the worms themselves unless you get a flashlight and look at your child's butt at night. They are about half an inch long, white, and as thin as a thread. If you get infected, you'll notice intense itching that you really cannot ignore. Mild itching when reading this post is probably psychosomatic.
How to deal with them: There's a medicine you can buy, which is sometimes shelved with the first aid stuff and lice treatments, and sometimes behind the pharamcy counter, called pyrantel pamoate. You do not need a prescription. Everyone in the family should be treated, with the exception of infants and pregnant women, who shouldn't have the medicine. (The worms will clear after a few months, provided you are scrupulous with hygiene to not reinfect anyone. Don't even try that route with toddlers, they are just not clean enough.) After everyone has had a dose, it's time to clean. Wash all bedding, cut everyone's nails, wipe down surfaces. You may want to do all this again in a week, because that is how long the eggs live. Keep kids, as much as possible, from scratching, and make sure they wear underwear or diapers at all times. They can have a bath, but make sure it's hot and involves soap. No swimming or wading pools. Within a couple days, the itching will go away.
A week or two later, give everyone a second dose. You may think you got rid of them the first time, but the kids have almost certainly reinfected themselves. A second dose will kill all the juvenile worms in their guts. If you don't do this, two months from now they'll all be screaming at night again and you'll wonder where they got it this time. Answer: they got it from themselves. That is how long their life cycle is. The second dose prevents this and hopefully you won't ever have to deal with the disgusting creatures again.
6. Impetigo
Impetigo is a staph infection of the skin. It's usually not serious, though it can get bad if you leave it too long untreated. And it's very catchy -- the doctor told us he once treated a family of ten that all had it. Imagine the cost of ten doctor visits. Yeah, don't let this get out of hand.
How to prevent: Put neosporin or another antibiotic ointment on all cuts and scrapes. Neosporin kills most strains of staph, which usually gets in through small cuts. If one child has it, avoid sharing cups, utensils, and food.
How to know you have it: Sores like bad cold sores, whether on the mouth or elsewhere on the body. They might be blistery-looking, oozy, or even green or purple. Basically they look nasty and infected, and may grow instead of healing. Impetigo by the mouth looks almost exactly the same as herpes cold sores, but the good news is, you don't really have to know which it is. Antibiotic ointment will cure it if it's impetigo, and if it's a cold sore, it will heal on its own.
How to treat it: If neosporin doesn't work, or if you're first noticing it and the child has multiple large sores, take them in to the doctor and get prescription ointment. The doctor may also prescribe an oral antibiotic. If it's just one spot and it's small, go ahead and try neosporin first. If it's working, the sore will start shrinking within a day or two.
7. Stomach virus
The bane of all families everywhere. If one child gets it, you're all doomed. I hardly know which is worse -- for everyone to be puking at once, or for you to drop one at a time, so that it takes ages before everyone is well again.
How you know you have it: Oh, you know. Vomiting is not something you can miss! If anyone has vomited in the last 24 hours, just assume it's a virus. It might be food poisoning, it might be carsickness, it might be choking, but can you really take the risk? Unless you are positive it's something else, stay home for 24 hours after an isolated case of vomiting and 48 hours after full-blown illness.
How to prevent it: Never ever for any reason go over to the house of someone who has just had it, or have a playdate with someone who might have it. The virus lives up to a week on surfaces and is extremely catching. It can't hurt to wash your hands often and avoid touching your face, but if you have children, you can safely assume that any contact with the virus will result in illness. I once got it from my siblings a solid week after they'd gotten better. Spent half my Christmas vacation in a sleeping bag feeling the room spin and wishing for just one sip of water, which I knew I couldn't keep down.
How to cure: Alas, you can't. I have heard of drinking grape juice as soon as you feel queasy, but I have no idea if this works. Just wait it out. Give children small sips of water or pedialyte -- no food until they've been vomit-free on fluids for several hours. Infants may breastfeed, but what I do is nurse on one side only, so they're getting a bit less than usual. That way they're getting some fluids but not too much.
Children cannot possibly make it to the toilet in the time it takes them to realize they're about to barf, so give each child a bowl to hold in their lap or put beside their bed. Wrap everyone in easily-washed blankets and keep rags handy. If you are puking yourself, taking care of them may be very difficult. Keep the TV on and everything you need handy. I wish you could get help, but unfortunately anyone who helps you WILL get it, so most likely no one will want to do that. If they offer, they clearly would take a bullet for you.
When the children start to recover and are asking for food, start slow. Do the BRATY diet -- bananas, rice, applesauce, toast, and yogurt. Start with a bite or two, wait a bit, then let them have more. Once everyone in the family is well, wipe down all surfaces with lysol, bleach, or straight vinegar. Don't invite anyone over for at least a week, but the family can go places again once everyone has been vomit-free for 48 hours.
8. Carpenter bees
So much less of a big deal than germs. Carpenter bees are big bumblebees that come out in about May and eat holes in your deck. They like untreated wood best -- fences, porches, trellises. Mostly a nuisance, but if you let them be, they'll eventually destroy all your wooden things.
How you know you have them: Holes appear in your wood, about a quarter to half an inch around. They're slanted, so you won't see inside very well. Sawdust may appear below the hole. And in the spring, big black bumbling bees fly around. They rarely sting, but my kids are terrified of them anyway.
How to prevent: Treat all wood in your yard by painting or sealing it. Once you've got the bees, they may not be deterred, but if you don't have them yet, they will probably not get established.
How to cure: Traps are the best way. This kind can be made yourself, or your hardware or garden store might have them. At first, our trap didn't catch anything. I heard it was because they prefer weathered wood and it was brand new. But elsewhere I heard that you can attract bees by catching a female bee (the one with a black head) in the jar. I happened to find one stuck on our screen porch, so I scooped it into the jar. Sure enough, by the next day I was starting to catch bees. They prefer pre-existing holes to having to chew new ones, so you'll catch more if you plug up all their old holes with caulk, wood glue, or expanding foam.
9. Bathroom mildew
Mildew is just gross-looking. It's never caused us any harm, but I still don't like it and want it gone.
How to know you have it: black or gray patches growing on your bathroom ceiling, toilet lid, or any other damp place. How do you know it's not dangerous black mold? Well, the main way is that mildew comes right off, while black mold doesn't. Here are some more tips.
How to prevent it: Ventilate your bathroom. If it has a fan, turn it on when you shower. If it has a window, open it after you shower. There is mildew-proof primer you can paint your bathroom with, which may help. Hang towels where they have air all around them, and spread out the shower curtain to dry.
How to cure it: Scrub it down every time it starts to reappear. I use straight vinegar but bleach will also work.
10. The common cold
Alas, much, much too common. We've been passing around different strains of it since school started. It's usually no more than a nuisance, but coughing and stuffy noses can interfere with sleep. And sometimes children get fevers even with colds that give adults few or no symptoms.
How to prevent it: Wash hands. I know. Encourage kids not to touch their faces. One of the most common places they'll get a cold is from you, the parent, so try not to swap germs with them more often than you have to. If you go somewhere without them, or the other parent does, wash hands when you get home. Each child should have their own sippy cup rather than drinking yours.
How to know you have it: You know the drill: sore throat, runny nose, sinus headache, cough. With a baby who can't talk, you'll only see the snot, so very often the first day of the cold, they'll just be inexplicably fussy. Then the next day, they have a runny nose, and you're like "ohhhhhh." The main difference between colds and allergies is that colds have a progression of symptoms while allergies keep the same set of symptoms, just more or less off them, as long as you have them.
How to cope with it: You can't cure it, obviously. But plenty of rest will help everyone get through it as painlessly as possible. A day off school isn't a bad idea. I like to make chicken soup with lemon, garlic, ginger, and cayenne -- it really blasts the yucky feeling away. Medicine isn't really necessary unless people feel really awful. Unfortunately, cough medicine isn't available for children under four, but for older children you can give some before bed. For sore throats, sore ears, and sinus headaches, ibuprofen or tylenol are available. Ibuprofen works better and lasts longer, and there's less risk of overdose, so it's what I choose.
If their forehead feels hotter than usual, as well as dry, they probably have a fever. (A hot face and neck is common with a cold even if they don't have a fever.) I leave it alone unless the child is very distressed and uncomfortable, or if they can't sleep. If it gets over 102, it's good to bring it down with ibuprofen. They say medicating a fever doesn't make it less effective, but it can make a child feel so much better he goes back to playing, while a fever will make them rest. With a baby, if they're not medicated, I keep them against my body as much as possible, so that I have a sense of how hot they are and my body will cool them down. You really break a sweat doing this.
If a child has a fever, keep them home for 24 hours afterward. Fevers often peak at night, so never assume that a fever that disappears in the morning is gone for good. It could come back later.
Best wishes, and I hope all these plagues stay clear of your family! But if they do befall you, I hope my experience helps you out.
+JMJ+
ReplyDeleteIs this "Nature is beautiful and terrible, Part 2"? LOL! Well, maybe just the terrible part.
I had a plague of ants in my old bedroom and bathroom as well, which was crazy because I didn't eat in there. I tried everything short of sealing the crack in the wall where they were all obviously coming from. The new owners have probably already done that.
There was a mouse in the faculty room when I worked as a teacher. I had heard stories about "Ben" (named after the Michael Jackson song and the movie it was on the soundtrack of), but never had evidence until the morning I saw that a chocolate bar I had left in my desk cabinet had been gnawed at. Oh, Ben . . .
My sister's dog gets the drop on the back of the neck regularly. And boy, does she treat all of us like we're traitors when she gets it! We've never had an outbreak like you did, though. What a story!
I don't remember pinworms and impetigo being "a thing" when I was a child--either in my home or among my classmates at school. Reading about them here reminds me of when I went to New Zealand and heard about meningitis for the first time. All the Kiwi kids knew all about it and how dangerous it could be, but the Asian international students didn't seem to. I mentioned this to a Kiwi doctor and she said, "People from [country redacted] all have meningitis living in the back of their throats anyway, so they don't get sick." (That's definitely not a direct quote, so people with better medical knowledge must forgive my memory. But I'll never forget the students from [country redacted] being totally offended!) Anyway, I know that Filipino children can get "worms" when they aren't eating properly, but this is the first I've heard of butts being itchy!
Finally, the common cold . . . Speaking of being a teacher, schools were germlandia. I think that all the time I was teaching, I had a cold more often than I didn't have one. My poor immune system had something to do with it, too, of course, but now that I'm out of academia, I rarely catch colds. And that's despite taking public transportation nearly every day!
I could have stayed ahead of the fleas if it weren't the month Michael was born. I would lay him down for a nap and want to sweep or vacuum, but within minutes he'd be screaming because a flea had bitten him. It was awful, and I was so ashamed I told nobody but my mother. That was one of the worst periods of my life ... only topped by the few months Miriam was a newborn.
ReplyDeleteMaybe pinworms don't like your climate! Or maybe something you eat is a natural poison for them. I know people in some countries commonly take a dewormer once a year anyway, and that's got to cut down on minor parasites like pinworms.
As for impetigo, it's just another name for a mild staph infection of the skin. MRSA is an antibiotic-resistant version. So it's probably just the name you don't know. And it's not super common. I've never had it, but my mom has. And Miriam had it last year, though we managed by some miracle to keep her from passing it to anybody.
Schools are petri dishes. Now people are telling me not to worry, being constantly sick is common for a child's first few YEARS of school. Years???
"Mild itching when reading this post is probably psychosomatic" made me CRACK UP.
ReplyDeleteI imagine that children between the ages of 1 and 4 could be given things like warm milk with honey, though I've never been able to get J to drink anything but water and juice.