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More treatment steps for threadworms in children

Average rating: 4 out of 5 star rating

So, hygiene measures aim to clear any eggs from the body and the home, and to prevent any eggs from being swallowed. This will then break the cycle of 're-infection'. Every member of the household should do the following for two weeks after the first dose of medicine.

  • Wear underpants or knickers at night. This is so that if you scratch in your sleep, you will not touch the skin near the anus.
  • Keep fingernails short. Wash hands and scrub nails each morning. Wash hands before meals or snacks, before preparing food, and after going to the toilet or changing nappies.
  • Every morning have a bath, or wash around the anus, to get rid of any eggs laid overnight. You must do this straight away after getting up from bed.
  • Change and wash underwear, nightwear (and bed linen if possible) each day. Avoid shaking clothes and linen as any eggs on them may be wafted into the air and become part of the dust.
  • Keep toothbrushes in a closed cupboard. Rinse well before use.

Also, on the day when you take the medicine, it is best to have a 'blitz' around the home, which aims to clear any eggs which may be part of the dust. This should include:

  • Vacuum and dust all household carpets, particularly those where children play.
  • Damp-dust smooth surfaces with a cloth rinsed in hot water. Again, particularly in places where children play, and in bedrooms and the bathroom. Throw out the cloth after use.

After an initial thorough cleaning blitz, some people suggest that you vacuum and damp-dust every day for 14 days.

However, it may not be your home, which is a main source of threadworm eggs. Your children may come into contact with eggs in schools or nurseries, particularly in the toilets if they are not cleaned properly. If your child has recurring threadworms, it may be worth checking that toilet facilities at schools, nurseries, etc, are regularly cleaned in a way that will remove any threadworm eggs which may be present.

If you are pregnant

You should not take medicines which kill worms. The worms die after about 6 weeks. Provided that you do not swallow any new eggs, then no new worms will grow to replace them. So, if you continue the hygiene measures described above for 6 weeks, then this should break the cycle of 're-infection', and clear your gut of threadworms.

Average rating:

4 out of 5 star rating

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julie b, 9 months

How long after taking ovex dose, does it take to rid the body of pinworm & itching stop

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Jenny K, about 1 year

Does anyone know how long it takes for the worms to disappear after the initial dose please? I can't seem to find this info anywhere.

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kim b, over 2 years

this was helpful.as my doctor never told us that it could be caught from public toilets ect,only about the cleanious in the home of which any normal caring parent would follow/do anyway

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