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NOTE: This Department of Corrections resource cannot be ordered from this website. All men’s prisons throughout New Zealand received hard copies of this resource in July 2013. What is scabies? Scabies causes a very itchy rash. Tiny insects (mites) lay eggs under the skin. The skin gets small blisters with red patches
NOTE: This Department of Corrections resource cannot be ordered from
this website. All men’s prisons throughout New Zealand received hard copies of
this resource in July 2013.
What is scabies?
Scabies causes a very itchy rash. Tiny insects (mites) lay eggs under the
skin. The skin gets small blisters with red patches around them.
Why is it important to treat scabies?
Scabies won’t go away without treatment. It can lead to more serious
infections.
Who gets it?
Anyone! Even very clean people get scabies.
Washing with soap and water doesn’t stop you getting scabies and it doesn’t
get rid of scabies.
How do you catch it?
You get it through:
close bodily contact, eg, holding hands, hugging, sleeping together
sharing clothes and bedding.
Scabies does not live in furniture or carpets.
How do you know you have it?
Scabies causes a very itchy rash. It’s worse at bedtime or when you are warm.
You may first notice the rash between your fingers, on your wrists, inside
your elbows, around your waist, on your bottom or on your private parts.
If you are worried about scabies, talk to the health centre nurse. Put in a
health request form (health chit) to see a nurse.
How to treat scabies
A nurse will give you some cream and tell you how to use it.
Scabies won’t go away without treatment.
It’s best to treat scabies just before going to bed.
First, have a shower and dry yourself.
Cover your whole body with cream, from the chin down to the bottom of the
feet, including between the fingers, under the nails and on the private
parts.
Put your night clothes on.
Leave the cream on all night. (If you wash your hands, put the cream back on
your hands. It needs to stay on all night.)
Next morning, have a shower and put on clean clothes.
To stop scabies from spreading:
all clothes worn against your skin in the last week must be washed in
hot water
sheets, pillowcases, towels and facecloths should be washed in hot water
(not blankets, duvets or quilts)
your nurse may tell you to repeat the treatment.
The itchiness will not stop straight away. It can take up to four weeks for
the itch to stop. You can ask the nurse for something that will stop the itch.
One treatment should get rid of scabies. If you still have the rash and itch
after four weeks, put in another health request form.
Preventing scabies
Don’t share a bed or clothes with someone who has untreated scabies.
This resource is based on information from the Ministry of Health resource
Scabies, May 2011.
Scabies: Symptoms, Pictures, Treatment & More
Practice Nursing - Scabies: an update for nurses
Scabies Healthify
How to Prevent Scabies
Scabies: the neglected tropical disease that is everywhere - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
Scabies KidsHealth NZ
Scabies Disease Outbreak Control Division
Doctor explains SCABIES in 60 seconds - causes, symptoms, treatment #shorts #scabies #health
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Scabies - Health Library - Qoctor your quick online doctor
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Scabies: diagnosis and management - bpacnz
Scabies - Dermatology - Medbullets Step 2/3