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U.S. Grappling With Bedbugs, Misusing Dangerous Pesticides

Bedbugs

MATT LEINGANG   08/31/10 12:40 AM ET   AP

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A resurgence of bedbugs across the U.S. has homeowners and apartment dwellers taking desperate measures to eradicate the tenacious bloodsuckers, with some relying on dangerous outdoor pesticides and fly-by-night exterminators.

The problem has gotten so bad that the Environmental Protection Agency warned this month against the indoor use of chemicals meant for the outside. The agency also warned of an increase in pest control companies and others making "unrealistic promises of effectiveness or low cost."

Bedbugs, infesting U.S. households on a scale unseen in more than a half-century, have become largely resistant to common pesticides. As a result, some homeowners and exterminators are turning to more hazardous chemicals that can harm the central nervous system, irritate the skin and eyes or even cause cancer.

Ohio authorities, struggling against widespread infestations in Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton and other cities, are pleading with EPA to approve the indoor use of the pesticide propoxur, which the agency considers a probable carcinogen and banned for in-home use in 2007. About 25 other states are supporting Ohio's request for an emergency exemption.

The EPA rejected the request in June but said it would consider new information on it. An agency spokesman, Dale Kemery, said the EPA has pledged to find new, potent chemicals to kill bedbugs, which can cause itchy, red bites that can become infected if scratched.

In the meantime, authorities around the country have blamed house fires on people misusing all sorts of highly flammable garden and lawn chemicals to fight bedbugs. Experts also warn that some hardware products – bug bombs, cedar oil and other natural oils – claim to be lethal but merely cause the bugs to scatter out of sight and hide in cracks in walls and floors.

A pest control company in Newark, N.J., was accused in July of applying chemicals not approved for indoor use throughout 70 homes and apartments units, even spraying mattresses and children's toys. No illnesses were reported.

In Cincinnati, an unlicensed applicator saturated an apartment complex in June with an agricultural pesticide typically used on golf courses. Seven tenants got sick and were treated at the hospital. The property was quarantined, and all tenants were forced to move. Authorities are pursuing criminal charges.

"When you see the anguish that bedbugs cause these people, it's understandable why they might take things into their own hands, and some of it is very dangerous," said Michael Potter, an entomologist at the University of Kentucky and one of the country's leading bedbug experts.

Bedbugs, a common household pest for centuries, all but vanished in the 1940s and '50s with the widespread use of DDT. But DDT was banned in 1972 as too toxic to wildlife, especially birds. Since then, the bugs have developed resistance to chemicals that replaced DDT.

Also, exterminators have fewer weapons in their arsenal than they did just a few years ago because of a 1996 Clinton-era law that requires older pesticides to be re-evaluated based on more stringent health standards. The re-evaluations led to the restrictions on propoxur and other pesticides.

Though propoxur is still used in pet collars, it is banned for use in homes because of the risk of nausea, dizziness and blurred vision in children. Steven Bradbury, director of the EPA's pesticide program, said the problem is that children crawl on the floor and put their fingers in their mouths.

Critics in the pest control industry say that the federal government is overreacting and that professional applicators can work with families to prevent children from being exposed to harmful levels of the chemical, which is more commonly used outside against roaches and crickets.

"It's a knockout pesticide, vastly superior to anything else for bedbugs," said Andrew Christman, president of Ohio Exterminating Co., which is on pace to treat about 3,000 bedbug infestations in 2010, up from an average of two in 2006.

Christman said other in-home pesticides aren't as lethal as propoxur, requiring several treatments that can push extermination costs to $500 or $1,500, depending on the size of a home.

Marion Ehrich, a toxicologist at the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine, said the EPA is showing appropriate caution. She said other scientists who have studied the bedbug problem are not eager to see propoxur released in homes.

"Propoxur is not a silver bullet, and given time, bedbugs would likely become resistant to it, too," said Lyn Garling, an entomologist at Penn State University.

Experts say it is going to take a comprehensive public health campaign – public-service announcements, travel tips and perhaps even taxpayer-funded extermination programs for public housing – to reduce the bedbug problem.

People can get bedbugs by visiting infested homes or hotels, where the vermin hide in mattresses, pillows and curtains. The bugs are stealth hitchhikers that climb onto bags, clothing and luggage.

After the bugs were discovered this summer in a Times Square movie theater and some upscale clothing stores, New York City began a $500,000 public awareness campaign.

Last week, the pest control company Terminix listed New York, Philadelphia and Detroit as the three most-infested cities, based on call volume to its 350 service centers. Ohio had three cities in the top 10.

For Delores Stewart, 76, bedbugs have been a nightmare, infesting her Columbus home since last year.

"It's awful, it's disheartening and it's a terrible way to live," Stewart, 76, a retired meat factory worker who discovered the vermin crawling in her bed and her living room recliners.

Her house was treated by a reputable exterminator for the fourth time Wednesday. She has warned neighbors and others about the problem and doesn't blame them for staying away.

"I feel isolated," she said.

Darrell Spegal, a property manager in Columbus who oversees four apartment complexes, said he has spent thousands of dollars to exterminate units.

"We have to try something different," Spegal said. "I mean, look around. The bugs are winning this war."

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — A resurgence of bedbugs across the U.S. has homeowners and apartment dwellers taking desperate measures to eradicate the tenacious bloodsuckers, with some relying on dangerous o...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A resurgence of bedbugs across the U.S. has homeowners and apartment dwellers taking desperate measures to eradicate the tenacious bloodsuckers, with some relying on dangerous o...
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03:28 AM on 09/06/2010
To get rid of them in your bed, wherever you see them, use a candlestick - burn the wax directly onto the bugs, especially the eggs. Do it every few days until you are sure they are all dead. Then later remove the wax off if you do not want to see the wax patches. Quick, easy and cheap.
04:49 PM on 08/31/2010
LOL.. these things don't care if it's clean or dirty, they eat human blood. So as long as you sleep and have blood in your veins, they'll be there. What a ditz!
04:47 PM on 08/31/2010
One other thing... they can't tolerate heat. I've heard of some who are hiring companies to come in with steamers to kill them. If you can seal off a room and maintain a temp of 110 degrees or higher, you can get rid of them. Just an FYI 'cause these things are disgusting.
04:45 PM on 08/31/2010
Having had an unfortunate encounter with these critters in a hotel, I did a little research. Before you stay in a hotel or rent an apartment check bedbugregistry.com. It is a site that reports on infestations. It also shows trends in cities and hotel chains. FYI... diatomaceous earth only works if the bugs crawl through it. You can also do what I did, contact the management of the hotel chain, call the local Health Department (who will send someone out to inspect), make as much noise as you can. These hotels are not doing what they should be doing to eradicate, it's pretty clear.
04:42 PM on 08/31/2010
On vacation? Think about putting a couple of flea collars in your luggage. Wash everything as soon as you get home.
02:55 PM on 08/31/2010
Go out and get some Malathion at the hardware store. Just take care in the application process, wear goggles and a dust mask, long sleves and sweat pants. Don't get it on your skin while it is wet, that is when it is toxic. The stuff works.

Malathion will kill all of your bed bugs. It is banned from indoor use inside the US, but you can still buy it for outdoor use. It is recommended by the World Health Organization. Screw the EPA. Don't pay an exterminator hundreds or thousands when they can't even use something as powerful as you can buy at Lowes or Home Depot. Malathion is the whip.

http://cesspoolofhumanity.blogspot.com/2010/08/malathion-will-kill-your-bed-bugs.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
03:06 PM on 08/31/2010
why was it ban? you remember?
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02:20 PM on 08/31/2010
Use Diatomaceous Earth! It is safe, all natural and non toxic. It kills all sorts of insects, bed bugs, fleas, etc. The best kind to use is food grade... it is even safe for us to eat! It can also be used to kill intestinal parasites. I use it on my pets all the time and would use it if I ever got bed bugs. It's such a shame that we use dangerous chemicals when it is unnecessary... we have natural, safe, tried and true ways of overcoming pests and yet we keep killing ousrelves slowly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rokgoo
looking for the right side of the left
01:41 PM on 08/31/2010
Fear industry works well. Last year swine flu, this year bedbugs.
01:34 PM on 08/31/2010
So, Kerosene or cedar oil? Could Huffpost sift through suggestions and post a synopsis? I don't have them yet, but like most people I'm getting the skebbie jebbies just thinking about it. I know back in the early 60's when I was a baby, my house had them and my parents had to wash and burn stuff. They never indicated spraying of any kind. Now, I'm afraid to go to the movies!! I was just told that a theatre in central New Jersey had bedbugs!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wutzurbeef
99% All American, No FILLER!
12:35 PM on 08/31/2010
They should try using diatomaceous earth. It is natural and totally safe around children and pets. It acts like sharp, crystal shards, piercing the exoskeleton of the insects, and killing them. Great for controlling ants, roaches and other insects too. You can get it at most lawn & garden or pool supply stores.
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tibetanterrier
reirretnatebit
12:24 PM on 08/31/2010
from your mattress they will seep into ears and infiltrate brain.. in no time you will saying, 'ya betcha'.
12:37 PM on 08/31/2010
Bedbugs can't live where it's that cold. I think you mean't "My friends" and "Yes we can," the condition you're referring to is yet to be explained by science.
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tibetanterrier
reirretnatebit
12:40 PM on 08/31/2010
when you say cold do you mean brain de@d?
01:23 PM on 08/31/2010
LMAO!!! Thank you for a funny !
12:18 PM on 08/31/2010
If people would clean their houses and clean their sheets once a week this wouldn't be an issue that the CDC would have to investigate. What happened to being clean?
12:25 PM on 08/31/2010
Of course it is their own fault, what could be easier than blaming others and feeling superior?

Hows about this Einstein: Bedbugs thrive in clean environments, they do not like dust and dirt, it messes with them when there is a lot of dust around.

Further, they spread to new places often through hotel rooms which are, wait for it... cleaned daily.

But please, go back to feeling superior.
03:20 PM on 08/31/2010
@TCC: it has nothing to do with being superior. It has to do with being clean.

And although hotels and motels are "cleaned daily" must not be good enough.

Thank you very much.
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Ainsaade
Covered in bees
03:27 PM on 08/31/2010
Agreed with the previous poster - doesn't have much to do with being clean. If you go to a hotel, sleep there a couple of night and bring some bugs back on your clothes or in your suitcase, that's all they need - as soon as they have a hard surface to crawl onto, they will, and no amount of sheet washing gets rid of them once they're in your mattress and multiplying lime rabbits on crack - getting rid of your mattress or sheets is the only thing that helps at that point, but it doesn't necessarily mean someone wasn't being clean.
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12:16 PM on 08/31/2010
Too many NASTY raas people live in farin!!!!
12:07 PM on 08/31/2010
How to solve this problem in one day: allow the use of DDT for indoor spraying. Bedbugs were eradicated in the U.S. when DDT became available, and began their gradual comeback when that pesticide was no longer used. Like most "end of the world" environmentalist claims, the case against DDT was greatly exaggerated. Remember that the inventor of DDT was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine! Used carefully and especially indoors, bye-bye bedbugs, without harming wildlife.
12:35 PM on 08/31/2010
This is a tired old meme at this point. Bedbugs developed resistance to DDT back in the 40s and it continues to today.

Further if the ban on DDT was the cause, why did it take 20+ years for this outbreak to develop.

Don't believe me, try the Cato institute, that is probably right wing enough for you:
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa513.pdf
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02:27 PM on 08/31/2010
I witnessed the damaging effects of DDT first hand. The wildlife in my community is only now beginning to recover from exposure to DDT being dumped here in the 70's. Please educate yourself before you claim to know something. By the way, nothing just stays indoors and God forbid there are children, pregnant women or pets in there.
11:11 AM on 08/31/2010
Gee, do you think this might have something to do with global warming? Seems like a lot of critters are surviving and migrating in and to areas where they haven't been seen before. All it takes is a change of a couple of degrees.....
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truenortherner
All will be revealed
12:27 PM on 08/31/2010
Makes sense to me.
I live north of the 56th parallel and we are getting bedbugs. This is unprecedented as the climate here has traditionally been too cold.
The same for the pine beetle ... usually killed off over winter, but the last three have been too mild.
04:50 PM on 08/31/2010
It has more to do with global travel, I think.