Coming Soon: New Building for Children's Specialty Care
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.
Ticks are small spider-like creatures that live in grass, bushes, wooded areas, and along seashores. They attach their bodies onto a human or animal host. Ticks prefer hairy areas, such as the scalp, behind the ear, in the armpit and groin, and also between fingers and toes. Tick bites often happen at night and occur more in the spring and summer months.
Follow these steps:
Don't touch the tick with your bare hand.
Use a pair of tweezers to remove the tick. Grab the tick firmly by its mouth or head as close to your child's skin as possible.
Don’t twist or jerk the tick. This can cause its mouth parts to break off. If the mouth-parts break off and remain in the skin, remove the parts with tweezers. If you can’t remove the mouth with clean tweezers, leave it alone and check with your healthcare provider.
Save the tick and place it in a plastic container or bag so it can be tested for disease, if needed.
Once removed, wash the area of the bite well with soap and water and apply an antiseptic lotion or cream.
Call your child's healthcare provider to find out about follow-up care.
No matter how careful you are about animals in your home, or how much care you take when your child is outdoors playing, insect bites are sometimes unavoidable.
By staying calm and knowing some basic first aid, you can help your child overcome both the fear and the stress of bites.
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.