Clinical & Educational Resources

For Professionals

Technical resources for clinicians, educators, and public health professionals working on tick-borne disease in North Carolina.

Clinician Resources

For Clinicians & Healthcare Providers

Critical clinical context for diagnosing and treating tick-borne disease in NC.

40% of patients do not recall a tick bite

Absence of a recalled bite should never rule out tick-borne disease in a symptomatic NC patient.

A bull’s-eye rash is not required

The rash may be solid red, oval, or non-visible. Some patients with RMSF and Lyme never develop a rash at all.

Lab tests are unreliable in the acute phase

Serology for Lyme disease is particularly unreliable early. Clinical diagnosis based on history and signs is essential.

Untreated RMSF can kill up to 20% of patients

Even with prompt treatment, RMSF mortality may be ~5%. Ehrlichiosis may also be fatal. Early empiric treatment is appropriate.

Co-infections change the clinical picture

Babesiosis and bartonella can alter presentation and require concurrent treatment.

STARI — Southern Tick Associated Rash Illness

Transmitted by Lone Star tick. Should be treated as Lyme-like disease until further research clarifies etiology.

NC Tick Species and Disease Associations

Lone Star Tick (Amblyomma americanum) — Ehrlichiosis, STARI, Tularemia, Tick Paralysis; possibly Lyme, Babesiosis

American Dog Tick (Dermacentor variabilis) — Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Tick Paralysis, Tularemia

Brown Dog Tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus) — Ehrlichiosis, Babesiosis; possibly RMSF

Blacklegged / Deer Tick (Ixodes scapularis) — Lyme Disease, Babesiosis, Ehrlichiosis, Bartonella; possibly Powassan Encephalitis

Gulf Coast Tick (Amblyomma maculatum) — Rickettsia parkeri rickettsiosis

Treatment Considerations

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    Doxycycline is first-line for RMSF, Ehrlichiosis, and Anaplasmosis
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    For Lyme: some clinicians recommend 4–6 weeks vs. standard 2–3, especially when treatment is delayed
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    Co-infections (babesiosis, bartonella) must be treated concurrently
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    Do not wait for serology before initiating empiric treatment in high-suspicion cases
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    STARI: treat as Lyme-like disease

Key Clinical Resources

Educator Resources

For Educators & School Nurses

Downloadable materials, slide shows, and protocols for tick safety education.

Bilingual Tick Safety Handout

English/Spanish two-sided reference card covering NC tick species, proper removal, and symptoms.

NC Tick Foundation Booklet

Comprehensive printed guide covering tick biology, diseases, prevention, and what to do after a bite.

Latest Newsletter

Our most recent newsletter for classroom updates and tick safety awareness.

School Nurse Protocol

TIC-NC helped develop a protocol for school nurses treating students with an attached tick:

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    Use fine-tipped tweezers — do not burn, twist, or use petroleum jelly
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    Clean the bite area with alcohol and wash hands
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    Document the date, body location, and tick type if possible
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    Send the tick home in a sealed bag with the student
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    Notify parents in writing about symptoms to watch for over 30 days
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    Refer to a physician if fever, rash, or fatigue develops within 30 days

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Prompt: School nurse in a clinic speaking with a middle school student. Tick safety poster on wall. Sage green and off-white palette, professional.

Additional Professional Resources

Trusted organizations and data sources for tick-borne disease research.

NC & Government Resources

National & Research Resources

Questions or Partnership Inquiries?

We welcome outreach from clinicians, educators, researchers, and public health professionals.