Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

This is the most common way to get head lice | Nazzy Pakpour

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For as long as humans have had lice, we’ve fought hard to get rid of them. Nit combs, the fine-tooth brushes used to remove lice and their sticky eggs, have been found among the ancient remains of cultures across the globe. Today it’s...
Instructional Video9:01
SciShow

7 Things You Probably Don't Want to Know About Lice

12th - Higher Ed
Lice... the mere mention of them is enough to make most people all itchy. Well, get ready to get scratching, because we've compiled seven squirm-inducing lice facts on this week's List Show!
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow Kids

Where Do Lice Come From?

K - 5th
Lice are tiny bugs that love to live in people's hair and suck their blood! Anyone can get lice and they can be tricky to get rid of, but Jessi and Squeaks are here with some lice facts that could help you avoid these itchy little critters!
Instructional Video4:53
Healthcare Triage

Lice! They're Itchy, They're Tough to Kill, and They're Everywhere

Higher Ed
New ReviewLast week, we ventured into the world of bedbugs. Rather than frighten you off, this only seemed to when your appetite for episodes on creepy, crawly parasites. You want us to cover lice. I bet some of you are already itching your heads....
Instructional Video3:11
Curated Video

How to Treat Head Lice

9th - Higher Ed
Head lice are most common among children and are highly contagious, but there's no need to panic: They do not pose any serious medical threat and are certainly treatable.
Instructional Video5:59
Curated Video

Defeating Mutant Lice: The Sauna Experiment

6th - Higher Ed
David and Agathe tackle the problem of mutant lice that resist conventional treatments. With the help of a specialized scientist, they conduct a unique experiment using high heat in a sauna to see if it can effectively eliminate the...
Instructional Video0:45
Next Animation Studio

How to avoid and treat head lice

12th - Higher Ed
In the United States alone head lice causes around six to 12 million infestations a year in children between the ages of three and 11.