cathylynn wrote:
if you wash your hands thoroughly, including under the nails, after any time you touch your nether regions, you should be good.
NO! The pinworm is an
intestinal parasite that comes out of the anus of its infected host at night to lay its eggs. Those eggs can survive up to three weeks, even after falling off of the host at night and infesting nightclothes, bedding, and blankets. If you have pinworms and fall asleep on the couch, then anyone else who sits on that couch could become infected.
Merely washing one's hands is not enough. The victim must undergoes treatments with anti-parasitics, and literally boil every piece of fabric that they may have worn or slept on.
National Institutes of Health wrote:
Treatment
If your healthcare provider prescribes medicine for this condition, everyone who lives in your house should take it, regardless of whether they have symptoms. Medicines, such as mebendazole or pyrantel pamoate, are the most useful in treating pinworm infection.
To relieve the intense itching that often happens with pinworm infection, your healthcare provider may also prescribe a soothing ointment or cream.
Because of the strong probability that children will be reinfected outside the home, in a daycare setting for example, major efforts to eliminate the eggs from the home are of little help.
Prevention
Some of the ways that you and your children can prevent becoming infected or reinfected with pinworms include:
- Bathing after waking up
- Washing night clothes and bed sheets often
- Washing your hands routinely, particularly after using the bathroom or changing diapers
- Changing underwear every day
- Avoiding nail biting
- Avoiding scratching the anal area
Source:
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/pinworm ... fault.aspx