Vett Lloyd, PhD

Sackville, New Brunswick 

Dr. Vett Lloyd is a professor of Biology at Mount Allison University working on ticks and the pathogens they transmit.

Dr. Lloyd is the co-founder of the Canadian Lyme Science Alliance, an organization that aims to unite scientists, clinicians, and patients in the quest for a more comprehensive understanding of Lyme disease.

She is also the founding member of the Canadian Lyme Consortium and the Mount Allison Lyme Disease Network, interdisciplinary networks of researchers tackling the biological, social and human dimensions of Lyme disease and incorporating the Lyme patient community as full partners in this endeavor.

She has a special interest in encouraging community and citizen science in tick surveillance activities as a way to help “tick proof” communities.

More about Dr. Lloyd’s publications.

Vett Lloyd, PhD, at Mount Allison University in her lab.

CanLyme news

A lab tech leans over a table looking through a microscope.

So you’ve been bitten by a tick. Here’s why you’ll have to pay a private lab to test it for pathogens

May 27, 20267 min read

Canadian public health units no longer test ticks on behalf…

Green and red puzzle pieces make an artful montage, with a white line of a child walking with a cape.

Documentary sheds light on Lyme journey 

May 23, 20262 min read

The documentary En attendant… while waiting… was created by filmmaker…

A team of people sit around a boardroom table talking and gesturing at a slideshow. The CanLyme logo floats on the top right.

Job posting: CanLyme Senior Administrator

Apr 21, 20264 min read

This is a new role for CanLyme – being created…

All of the tools in the most fully featured tick removal kit are on display.

Tick removal kits

1 min read
We are a volunteer driven, registered charity. All proceeds go to education, prevention, awareness, research, and support.
A diagram of tick hotspots hover over top of an image of a hiker carrying a backpack.

Prevention tips

3 min read
Regular tick checks are a way to check your body for crawling or embedded ticks. Check everywhere including these hotspots.
Mother and child sit together tenderly in the beautiful light streaming into the kitchen through a multi panel window.

Donate now

6 min read
Your donation helps us to fund research and education for health care providers, advance prevention and awareness of Lyme disease – and more.
Illustrations in four panels of how to remove a tick by using tweezers and grabbing way low down near where it's embedded on the skin and pulling straight up, and then washing the skin around where it was embedded.

Tick removal

2 min read
If you’ve discovered an embedded tick on yourself or someone else there are a few important things to remember.
A microscopic view of borrelia burgdorferi, a corkscrew shaped bacteria.

Lyme basics

3 min read
Although it is most commonly associated with a tick bite, many people who have Lyme disease do not recall seeing or feeling a tick bite.
A woman walks with her two dogs along a path near in the forest.

Prevention

7 min read
By taking the right precautions and spreading the word, you can effectively protect yourself, and your family, from Lyme.