“Unlike most other ticks, which take a let’s-see-what-comes-along approach, the lone star will pursue you for several yards. It’s fast, able to crawl up a leg in seconds”
Link: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/11/opinion/ticks-disease-lyme-alpha-gal.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
...anxiously awaiting RFK Jr.'s recommendations...
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AI Overview
The Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) advises a "wait-and-watch" approach rather than routine antibiotic prophylaxis for tick bites, reserving preventative antibiotics strictly for identified high-risk Ixodes (blacklegged) tick bites in highly endemic areas. They recommend prompt, mechanical tick removal using fine-tipped tweezers.
The IDSA outlines the following core positions regarding blacklegged ticks and the diseases they transmit (such as Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, and babesiosis):
National Institutes of Health (NIH) | (.gov)
Prophylaxis Criteria: A tick bite only warrants prophylactic antibiotics if it meets three criteria: the tick is an identified Ixodes species, it occurred in a highly endemic area, and attachment time was ≥ 36 hours. Treatment must begin within 72 hours of removal.
Removal Guidelines: Ticks should be pulled straight upward using clean, fine-tipped tweezers. IDSA strongly advises against traditional folklore methods, such as using heat, petroleum jelly, or twisting, which increase the risk of disease transmission.
Diagnosis: Lyme disease is primarily a clinical diagnosis, aided by FDA-approved serologic testing. Because the immune system requires time to produce antibodies, blood tests are typically most reliable when symptoms persist beyond the first two to four weeks.
Treatment of Disease: The IDSA opposes the use of long-term, unproven antibiotic therapies for chronic Lyme symptoms, warning that they lack rigorous scientific validation and present significant health dangers.
Expanding Risks: IDSA actively advocates for increased funding for tick surveillance, noting that blacklegged ticks are expanding their geographic ranges and frequently carry complex mixes of multiple pathogens.
For full clinical treatment algorithms and preventative advice, you can review the official IDSA Lyme Disease Guidelines.
If you recently found a tick, I can help you understand the risks by letting me know:
How long was the tick attached?
Where geographically did the bite occur?
Has the tick already been removed and saved?
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Consent Management