"Boom" in Bed Bugs...

rockin'robin

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
24,430
Reaction score
551
WASHINGTON — The biggest bedbug outbreak since World War II has sent a collective shudder among apartment dwellers, college students and business travelers across the nation.

The bugs — reddish brown, flat and about the size of a grain of rice — suck human blood. They resist many pesticides and spread quickly in certain mattress-heavy buildings, such as hotels, dormitories and apartment complexes.

Two shelters have closed temporarily in Charlotte, N.C. , because of bedbugs, a Yahoo chat group dedicates itself to sufferers and countless bedbug blogs provide forums for news, tips and commiseration. State inspectors say that more emphasis may be needed to tackle the creatures.

Federal officials have taken notice of the resurgence. Last month, the Environmental Protection Agency held its first-ever bedbug summit, and now a North Carolina congressman wants to take on the insect.

Democratic Rep. G.K. Butterfield just introduced legislation that would authorize $50 million that's already in the Department of Commerce budget to train health inspectors how to recognize signs of the insects.

The Don't Let the Bed Bugs Bite Act of 2009 also would require public housing agencies to submit bedbug inspection plans to the federal government. It would add bedbugs to a rodent and cockroach program in the Department of Health and Human Services . It also would require the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to research bedbugs' impact on public mental health.

Butterfield's letter to congressional colleagues about the legislation attracted lots of attention: It was topped with a full-color picture of the insect sitting on human skin.

Unfortunately, in recent years, the United States has seen a resurgence in bedbugs," the letter reads. "That's right — they're back in the sack — and biting."

Bedbugs have hit hotels and homes in every state. The creatures are amazing hitchhikers, experts say, and easily travel in suitcases, boxes or packages. They can live for up to a year without food.

Apparently no state has a central reporting system for bedbugs, according to Butterfield's office, and since the bug carries no known diseases, many health departments don't consider it a public health threat.

That leaves the critters falling through the cracks among regulators, said Michael Potter , an entomologist at the University of Kentucky and one of the country's bedbug experts.

"Most health departments say, 'Hey, we don't deal with bedbugs,' " Potter said.

Boom in tiny bedbugs is causing big trouble
 
Eww, I just had to google up bed bugs and now hubby is having the time of his life teasing me.

Yes, I am terribly squeamish!!
 
Run for ur lives! Bed Bugs & Crabs!

Some nursing homes & hospitals get infected also...I'm very leery about hotels/motels! When making a long trip to see my family, I just pulled into a rest area, put the car seat back, locked the doors and took a nap.

Might be a good idea to bring ur own bug spray before sleeping in a strange bed??
 
Yeah "Don't let the bed bugs bite" was a phrase when I was a kid. Bed bugs are real and they terrify me lol
 
Bed bugs arent a joke and not something to laugh at. Just pray that you will never get to experience a battle with them.
 
Run for ur lives! Bed Bugs & Crabs!

Some nursing homes & hospitals get infected also...I'm very leery about hotels/motels! When making a long trip to see my family, I just pulled into a rest area, put the car seat back, locked the doors and took a nap.

Might be a good idea to bring ur own bug spray before sleeping in a strange bed??

Bug spray do not work on them. Keep your luggage away from the floor and the bed. Put them in metal or plastic bins to prevent them from crawling in your luggage cuz once you bring them in your house, life will be living hell.
 
Professional treatment is reqiured for permanent eradication of bed bugs.

If it is really bad, yes. If caught early like I did, I was successful at eradicating them. I did hours and hours of research. Also, I read reports that even professionals had a hard time eradicating a severe outbreak and it is very very costly. I called one and they said that if it was a severe outbreak, the cost would have been $9,000.
 
Just recently, here in Jax...I read where an apartment complex was infested with them. The tenants had to move, leaving all their belongings until something was done.....I haven't followed up on this, tho.'

I've never seen a bed bug. And where I live, we have awesome pest control! Not one bug in my house.
 
I will be staying at the Hilton in St. Louis this weekend and will be bringing into the room only a change of clothing in a large plastic bag with zipper. I can ask the manager if the room was checked for bedbugs, but why trust their reply? Better safe than sorry. Oh well.
 
Back
Top