As we spend more time out of doors, measures to prevent Lyme disease and other tickborne illnesses are a must. The Millis Board of Health reminds you to:
• Check yourself and your pets every time you come in from your yard. Use a hand mirror to view difficult areas. It can take 24 hours or more for infected ticks to spread disease, so even if you get a tick bite, you may be able to stop yourself from getting sick just by removing the tick promptly.
• If you find a tick attached to your skin, use a fine tipped tweezer to grasp it near the skin and pull straight up.
• Apply insect repellent containing DEET to exposed skin and spray permethrin on clothes and shoes that you wear out of doors.
• See your physician for any flu-like symptoms or a bull’s eye rash or other blotchy rash. The majority of people with tickborne illness did not notice a tick on them.
• If left untreated, the bacteria that cause Lyme disease can spread and cause arthritis, shooting pains, numbness or tingling of the hands or feet, problems with short-term memory, and heart problems.
Additional information, including environmental methods to decrease the number of ticks in your yard can be found at: www.mass.gov/dph/tick. Other sources of information include: www.tickencounter.org. Brochures on “Preventing Disease Spread by Ticks” can be found at the Millis Library and the Town Clerk’s office and Millis Board of Health Office in the Town Hall.
Issue Date:
July, 2017
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