Bedbug Summit To Be Hosted By EPA

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DINA CAPPIELLO | 04/14/09 08:40 PM | AP

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This photo provided by Virginia Tech Department of Entomology, taken in 2008, shows mother and child bed bugs. The federal government is waking up to what has become a growing nightmare in many parts of the country _ a bed bug outbreak. The tiny reddish-brown insects, last seen in great numbers prior to World War II, are on the rebound. They have infested college dormitories, hospital wings, homeless shelters and swanky hotels from New York City to Chicago to Washington. (AP Photo/Tim McCoy, Virginia Tech Department of Entomology)

ARLINGTON, Va. — "Don't let the bedbugs bite."

Doesn't seem so bad in a cheerful bedtime rhyme, but it's becoming a really big problem now that the nasty critters are invading hospitals, college dorms and even swanky hotels.

With the most effective pesticides banned, the government is trying to figure out how to respond to the biggest bedbug outbreak since World War II.

Bedbugs live in the crevices and folds of mattresses, sofas and sheets. Then, most often before dawn, they emerge to feed on human blood.

Faced with rising numbers of complaints to city information lines and increasingly frustrated landlords, hotel chains and housing authorities, the Environmental Protection Agency hosted its first-ever bedbug summit Tuesday.

Organized by one of the agency's advisory committees, the two-day conference drew about 300 participants to a hotel in Arlington, just across the Potomac River from Washington. An Internet site notes that the hotel in question has had no reports of bedbugs.

One of the problems with controlling the reddish-brown insects, according to researchers and the pest control industry, is that there are few chemicals on the market approved for use on mattresses and other household items that are effective at controlling bedbug infestations.

Unlike roaches and ants, bedbugs are blood feeders and can't be lured by bait. It's also difficult for pesticides to reach them in every crack and crevice they hide out in.

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"It is a question of reaching them, finding them," said Harold Harlan, an entomologist who has been raising bedbugs for 36 years, feeding them with his own blood. He has the bites to prove it.

The EPA, out of concern for the environment and the effects on public health, has pulled many of the chemicals that were most effective in eradicating the bugs in the U.S. At the same time, the appleseed-sized critters have developed a pesticide resistance because those chemicals are still in use in other countries.

Increasing international travel has also helped them to hitchhike into the U.S.

"One of our roles would be to learn of new products or safer products. ... What we are concerned about is that if people take things into their own hands and start using pesticides on their mattresses that aren't really registered for that, that's a problem," said Lois Rossi, director of the registration division in the EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs.

The EPA is not alone in trying to deal with the problem. An aide to Rep. G.K. Butterfield, D-N.C., says the congressman plans to reintroduce legislation next week to expand grant programs to help public housing authorities cope with infestations.

The bill will be called the "Don't Let the Bedbugs Bite Act."

"It was clear something needed to be done," said Saul Hernandez, Butterfield's legislative assistant.

Bedbugs are not known to transmit any diseases. But their bites can cause infections and allergic reactions in some people. The insects release an anticoagulant to get blood flowing, and they also excrete a numbing agent so their bites don't often wake their victims.

Those often hardest hit are the urban poor, who cannot afford to throw out all their belongings or take other drastic measures. Extermination can cost between $400-$900.

So bedbug problems increase, said Dini Miller, an entomologist and bedbug expert at Virginia Tech, who until 2001 saw bedbugs only on microscope slides dating from the 1950s. Now she gets calls and e-mails several times a day from people at their wits' end.

"I can't tell you how many people have spent the night in their bathtubs because they are so freaked out by bedbugs," Miller said. "I get these people over the phone that have lost their marbles."

Because the registration of new pesticides takes so long, one thing the EPA could do is to approve some pesticides for emergency use, Miller said.

Another tactic would be to screen pesticides allowed for use by farmers to see if they are safe in household settings.

Representatives of the pest control industry will be pushing for federal funding for research into alternative solutions, such as heating, freezing or steaming the bugs out of bedrooms.

"We need to have better tools," said Greg Baumann, a senior scientist at the National Pest Management Association. "We need EPA to consider all the options for us."

___

On the Net:

Harvard School of Public Health: http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/bedbugs/

University of Kentucky Insect Advice: http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/ef636.asp

ARLINGTON, Va. — "Don't let the bedbugs bite." Doesn't seem so bad in a cheerful bedtime rhyme, but it's becoming a really big problem now that the nasty critters are invading hospitals, colleg...
ARLINGTON, Va. — "Don't let the bedbugs bite." Doesn't seem so bad in a cheerful bedtime rhyme, but it's becoming a really big problem now that the nasty critters are invading hospitals, colleg...
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My daughter lived in a San Francisco apartment when it was invaded by bedbugs. I recommended she use FOOD GRADE diatomaceous earth and sent her a pound. She put a few ounces in one of those squeezable catchup dispensers you can get at a 99c store.
I told her to lightly puff everywhere bedbugs go. If the dresser is already invaded, get the clothes out. Put them in a trash bag and puff into it and knot it tightly.
Put all clothes in plastic trash bags, puff the DE into the bag, and seal it. Dust the dirty laundry and put it in bags knotted tightly.
DE works because the gritty feeling powder is made from diatoms which have many sharp surfaces, if you are as tiny as a bug, it is like walking through glass shards. It cuts through the chitinous skin and dehydrates the bugs.
Anyway, my daughter and her roommates dusted everything in the apartment, the bathroom, the curtains, everything. And of course, the bedbugs are gone for the price of a pound of FOOD GRADE DE- Maybe $10.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 PM on 04/15/2009

I had bed bugs and there are still probably some bugs left in my house. They can live a whole year without blood. I used Diatomaceous Earth to get rid of them or at least keep them from coming out to bite me. I haven't been bit in almost a month but I am still highly paranoid. I know the DE is killing them because I have seen two dead ones. These bugs are diabolical I would not wish them on my worst enemy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 AM on 04/15/2009
- Bubba Gump I'm a Fan of Bubba Gump 249 fans permalink
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Guess what? There is a natural predator of the bedbug: the Thanatus flavodis spider!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanatus_flavidus

Now, who wants a couple hundred spiders crawling around their bed all night? LOL!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 04/14/2009
- lkf I'm a Fan of lkf permalink

Bedbugs are awful! Had them last year and it was misery (the bites are just as bad as red ants as far as itching goes) until I was finally able to get rid of them. Had to toss out a bunch of stuff, buy the zippered covers for both my mattress, pillows and boxspring. Read online that rubbing alcohol spray and lavender oil as a spray would get rid of them but also found Best Yet spray from cedercide.com and that stuff works. Also smells really nice. Not even sure how bedbugs got in the house but think it happened when I left the windows open during some nice spring weather and those rotten little f&*@%!s got in.

So far this year no bedbugs---knock wood. Been using outdoor pesticide and the Best Yet stuff inside.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 04/14/2009

Im sure Jindal would clown on funding for this just like he did before w/ Volcanoes. Then of course the next RNC convention would be infested and give him some more crow to eat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 04/14/2009
- wm1066 I'm a Fan of wm1066 35 fans permalink
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I thought I had bedbugs but they turned out to be vicious little red ants, but I ran across a folk cure for bedbugs and that is the herb pennyroyal. Put the herb in sachets around the bed, the smell drives them away. but pennyroyal is a poison if ingested so don't use it if you have kids or pets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 04/14/2009

I had this problem as well in an apartment in NYC. It is expensive and extremely frustrating and wouldn't wish it on anyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 04/14/2009

Sounds like another "crisis" that will cost a lot of money to solve!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 04/14/2009
- liminal67 I'm a Fan of liminal67 3 fans permalink

I think bedbug infestation hit an all time high under the Bush administration...they were bugging everything else why not the beds?

http://pitchbendpost.blogspot.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 04/14/2009
- jalyn I'm a Fan of jalyn 7 fans permalink

Never have encountered one and hope I never will; although my son's neighbor's apt, one floor above, had bedbugs, sprayed with chemicals, and everyone in adjacent apartments had to also have theirs in case the critters spread in through walls, floors. I get itchy just thinking of it.

Cover everything with plastic, until we find a cure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 04/14/2009
- Sarahmay57 I'm a Fan of Sarahmay57 12 fans permalink

Having been attacked by bedbugs in a very nice hotel within the past year, I concur that this is a real problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 04/14/2009
- VivaZapata I'm a Fan of VivaZapata 64 fans permalink
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from Leadbelly's Black Snake Moan, "It must have been a bed bug/ I know the chinch can't bite that hard."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 AM on 04/14/2009
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