Throughout history, one of the most consistent problems that has faced soldiers, refugees, and homeless populations is lice. Read through the journals of soldiers throughout WW1 and WW2, and you’ll see countless references to lice. During the 1970s lice infestations (technically called pediculosis) reached pandemic levels. That was attributed to increases in poverty, sexual promiscuity, and international travel. Typically, social upheaval is where we find the greatest number of lice infestations. It is interesting to note that poverty and sexual promiscuity can probably be pretty safely correlated with social upheaval.
Living life without all of the modern amenities seems to predispose someone to ending up with an infestation. But that’s where the problem lies, doesn’t it? As a prepper, you do everything you can to make sure that your family has a proper level of disaster-security so that should anything happen, your family will be prepared. You have already accepted the possibility that civilization may be a veneer, that bad things can happen, and that bad things could even happen to you. This doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to have an underground warehouse fully stocked with every potentially scarce good for every possible disaster scenario, but it does mean that increasing your knowledge base on at least the basics of disaster survival is a wise idea.
So, with that being said, what can you do should those bad things happen, should there be a breakdown in society, should you end up homeless, bugging out, or whatever, and you/somebody you love ends up with lice?
It doesn’t even have to be somebody you love. If a Katrina-level hurricane levels your community, how long will it take for somebody infested in your church’s shelter to spread the infestation? I’m not really sure if there are set numbers out there for that, but I’m pretty positive you wouldn’t want to experiment to find out at that point in time. And I’m not necessarily advocating the exclusion of anybody infested with lice from receiving your care and attention. What I am advocating is that you understand what you are getting yourself into when you create that exposure, and that you have something of a game plan developed to mitigate your risk in this scenario.Continue reading“Battling Lice, Post-Disaster, by Aden Tate”