Ticks and Lyme Disease

Lyme disease is an infection resulting from a bite from an infected blacklegged (deer) tick, and can be treated with antibiotics. Not all black legged ticks carry the virus that causes Lyme disease.

The Brant County Health Unit provides information about how to avoid tick bites and what to do if you are bit by a tick.

To reduce the risk of getting bitten by a tick, we recommend the following:

  • Wear closed-toe shoes, and light-coloured, long-sleeved shirts and pants.
  • Tuck pant legs into socks when walking in long grass.
  • Apply bug spray with DEET or Icaridin on skin and clothing.
  • After you get home from the outdoors, do a full body check for ticks on yourself, your children and your pets.
  • Have a shower or bath within two hours of being outdoors.

If you find a tick attached to your body, use tweezers or a specially designed tick remover to grab the insect as close to your skin as possible, and pull it straight out. Make a note of where you likely picked up the tick and where and when it bit you on your body. You can find more information and report your tick bite at etick.ca. If you feel unwell after a tick bite, call your doctor.

Removing the tick within 24 hours can help prevent infection. If you find a tick on yourself or a family member, follow these steps to remove it.

  1. Remove the attached tick with tweezers (grab the tick as close to the skin as possible and pull straight out).
  2. Wash your hands and apply antiseptic ointment to the bite area.
  3. Write down the date and place where the tick was most likely picked up and where on your body it bit you.
  4. Take a picture of the tick and submit it to etick.ca for identification by an expert. For more information and how to submit, visit www.etick.ca.
  5. If you think you have been infected by a tick, please see a doctor. You can also watch how to properly remove a tick (University of Manitoba).

Do not use nail polish, petroleum jelly or heat to burn the tick, or crush or damage the tick when attempting to remove it.

Visit your healthcare provider as soon as possible if:

  • you are not comfortable with removing a tick, or
  • you cannot remove the tick because it has buried itself deep into your skin.

Note: Ticks can be disposed of in household garbage once they are dead, and they can be killed by drowning them in rubbing alcohol, or by freezing for several hours. Avoid squashing ticks with exposed fingers.

To reduce the risk of getting bitten by a tick, we recommend the following:

  • Cover feet, arms and legs with closed-toe shoes, and light-coloured long-sleeved shirts and pants.
  • Tuck pant legs into socks.
  • Apply bug spray with DEET or Icaridin on skin and clothing (put on bug spray after applying sunscreen).
  • After you get home from the outdoors, do a full body check for ticks on yourself, your children and your pets. Feel for bumps and look for tiny dark spots. Look carefully, most ticks can be as small as a sesame seed!
  • Have a shower or bath within two hours of being outdoors.
  • Keep grass cut short in areas where people and pets may walk.
  • Remove leaf litter, brush and weeds at the edge of the lawn and around stonewalls and woodpiles, especially if your yard is bordered by woods or fields of tall grasses.
  • Add a wood chip, gravel, or river-stone border one or more metres wide to separate forested, shrubby, or tall grassed areas from your lawn.
  • Move wood piles and bird feeders away from the house/facility.
  • Clean up areas under and around bird feeders to reduce the attraction of small critters such as mice and voles that carry ticks.
  • Move children’s swing sets and sandboxes away from the edge of woodlands and place them on a woodchip or mulch foundation.
  • Use hard materials to landscape your yard such as stone or woodchip instead of soft materials like soil for planting.

If you feel sick or notice any of the following symptoms after being bitten by a tick, see your doctor and tell them you were bitten:

  • Circular red rash around the bite (rash typically looks like a bull’s-eye)
  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Swollen glands
  • Headache
  • Diarrhea
  • Weakness
  • Dry cough
  • Joint pain
  • Muscle aches
  • Stiff neck

All Brantford and Brant County residents can submit a tick for identification online.

As of August 6, 2021, the Brant County Health Unit has discontinued the in-person tick submission program following the direction of the Public Health Agency of Canada. Free online tick identification services are available at etick.ca.

Online Submissions

Free online tick identification services are available at etick.ca.

Through etick.ca, you can submit a picture of a tick that was removed from both humans and animals for free identification. Send in photographs of your tick and an expert will identify it within 48 hours. They will then contact you via email with the results and will provide the necessary public health-related information. All ticks results are posted on an interactive public tick map.