Ticks want your blood. Here’s how to ward off the tiny vampires.

The Central MA Regional Public Health Alliance (CMRPHA) is offering tips on how to protect yourself and your family this season.

Ticks are tiny bugs most likely found in shady, damp, brushy, wooded, or grassy areas (especially in tall grass), including your own backyard.

Different kinds of ticks feed on the blood of mammals (including people, dogs, cats, deer, and mice), birds, or reptiles (snakes and turtles, for example). In Massachusetts, certain kinds of ticks can bite you and spread diseases like Lyme disease, babesiosis, anaplasmosis, tularemia, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Borrelia miyamotoi, and Powassan virus.

Ticks do not fly or jump. They attach to animals or people that come into direct contact with them. Deer ticks and dog ticks are found throughout Massachusetts; Lone Star ticks are also found in some places in Massachusetts.

One of the most important things you can do is check yourself for ticks once a day. Favorite places ticks like to go on your body include areas between the toes, back of the knees, groin, armpits, and neck, along the hairline, and behind the ears. Remember to check your children and pets, too. Remove any attached ticks as soon as possible.

Check yourself, your children and your pets for ticks after coming inside (HOW TO PERFORM A TICK CHECK) https://www.mass.gov/doc/how-to-do-a-tick-check-0

  • Inside and behind the ears
  • Along your hairline
  • Back of your neck
  • Armpits
  • Groin
  • Legs
  • Behind your knees
  • Between your toes
     

Ticks are tiny, so look for new “freckles”
 

If you find a tick attached to your skin, don’t panic. Use a pair of fine point tweezers to grip the tick as close to the skin as possible and pull straight out with steady pressure. 

You should not apply kerosene, petroleum jelly, nail polish, or a hot match tip to remove the tick. These measures are not effective and may result in injury.

Circle the calendar date and note where on the body the tick was removed. You may want to save the tick for identification.

Your physician may choose to treat you following a deer tick bite. Notify your health care provider if you have been bitten by a deer tick or if you develop a rash or other signs of illness following a tick bite.
 

Talk to your doctor if you develop a rash where you were bitten or experience symptoms such as fever, headache, fatigue, or sore and aching muscles.
 

When going outside to an area likely to have ticks:

  • Stick to main pathways and the center of trails when hiking.
  • Wear a light-colored, long-sleeved shirt with long pants and tuck your pants into your socks. This may be difficult to do when the weather is hot, but it will help keep ticks away from your skin and make it easier to spot a tick on your clothing.Use bug repellents. Repellents that contain DEET can be used on your exposed skin. Permethrin is a product that can be used on your clothes. Always follow the product instructions and use repellents with no more than 30-35% DEET on adults and 10-15% DEET on children. Never use insect repellents on infants. See  fact sheet on Tick Repellents.         https://www.mass.gov/service-details/tick-repellents

Talk to your veterinarian about the best ways to protect your pets and livestock from ticks

CMRPHA  Arbovirus Brochure::  https://shrewsburyma.gov/DocumentCenter/View/9369/CMRPHA-arbovirus-broch…

One thought on “Ticks want your blood. Here’s how to ward off the tiny vampires.

  • April 13, 2021 at 11:06 am
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    “You should not apply kerosene, petroleum jelly, nail polish, or a hot match tip to remove the tick. These measures are not effective and may result in injury.”

    It’s actually far far worse. Those measures have been found to sometimes cause the tick to vomit the infectious agents into your body. Normally it takes from 24 to 72 hours of drinking your blood for an attached deer tick to infect you, using one of those old removal methods can make it infect you as you remove it.

    Back in the 60s & 70s we got away with the old methods because there was no Lyme disease and nearly 100% of the ticks in Southeast New England were dog ticks who do not carry any human diseases. The change to mostly deer ticks in SE NE also makes another rule of thumb from back then no longer true. Dog ticks are in tall grass but deer ticks are in the forest leaf litter so simply avoiding tall grass like we used to do in cub/boy scouts no longer helps.

    A great site for the latest tick public health info and science is form the University of RI, https://tickencounter.org/

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