It is not recommended. The tick has enough air to finish it's feeding and back out on it's own. Also, it may irritate the tick and cause it to vomit into the wound and increase the chance of infection.
You can use any form of shampoo or liquid soap; even dishwashing liquid will work. Your dog will never know! They can't read the labels.
Liquid dish soap will work, but use it dry, no water first. Work it in and you will see the grease separate. Then rinse thoroughly.
there is a hole on other end when you push down it forces soap into hole and pushes out the soap in the top
I'd say that the foam soap will work best because I tested out both liquid and foam soap and foam got off the most bacteria.
One can actually remove a tick at home provided it is done safely. Sterilize tweezers and try to use dish soap or Vaseline to get the tick to come out on it's own. If that doesn't work, use tweezers to firmly pull it out, head and all. If the area gets a bulls eye rash or turns black, see a doctor immediately.
Wash it with a soap and water. You can rub alcohol. If the soap and water doesn't work.
You can use glass cleaner to remove the stains that build up inside a coffee maker and to take away the stains. If dish soap does not work try a liquid cleanser with bleach which should definitely remove the stains.
Soft Soap Liquid Antibacterial Soap (Aquarium Pump bottle) will work just fine and has a low fragrance level, available in almost any drug store or grocery store.
To remove cooking from clothing, you need to use warm water with soap. If that will not work, you can soak the clothing in advance, or even use a product meant to remove stains.
What you do is you need to get an old toothbrush and get some water and soap...first try to get the gum off WITHOUT the water or soap then if that does not work use the water and soap. make sure when you get the water is is warm to hot water..
From first hand experience, foaming hand soap will work in a non-foaming dispenser. Although the soap will come out as regular soap, not foam. The foaming soap will work as regular soap, just not foaming soap.
Not all medical treatment is an OSHA Recordable event. If the treatment is at the level of first aid care, it is not recordable- even if performed by a physician. If the treatment is a simple one (remove tick with tweezers, clean skin, apply bandaid) that would not be a recordable. A DEEPLY EMBEDDED tick that requires numbing the skin, using a scalpel to remove tick, etc- is beyond simple first aid, and would likely be recordable.