Category Archives: Published Bedbug Articles

Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?

bedbug files Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?  Are bedbugs the new STDs?  When does a person go from being proactive about bedbug prevention to being paranoid about bedbugs?

The following is a great article written by Dakshana Bascaramurty of the Globe & Mail about the growing bedbug crisis  in Canada.

Bedbug fear worse than the bite?

When Ottawan Lisa Vod travelled to Toronto this past weekend, she brought the grubbiest contents of her wardrobe to the hotel: a ripped hoodie, an old sweatshirt and worn-out sweatpants. Before she left, Ms. Vod, a 34-year-old factory worker, knew she’d trash those clothes before she went home. She kept her nice outfits in the car to change into right before she went out on the town.

They may seem like extreme measures, but Ms. Vod has been bitten by the bed-bug hysteria infesting major Canadian cities in recent months.

canada bedbugs 300x255 Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?  Last year, Toronto Public Health received 1,500 reports of bed bugs. As of the end of August, they’d already racked up 1,334 reports for 2010, including 258 that month alone.

Rising even faster than the reports is bloodsucker paranoia. Victims trade stories about the lasting psychological effects on online bed-bug forums, those in charitable organizations business have become leery of donations, and people who have had infestations keep mum among friends and colleagues out of fear they’ll be stigmatized.

Exterminators and entomologists have floated various theories of why bed bugs – whose numbers had declined in the past few decades only to tick upward recently – are back. Susan Sperling, a spokeswoman for Toronto Public Health, says their increase could be due to the fact that people are travelling more and taking the critters with them in their suitcases from one city to another. Another reason could be the ban of broad-spectrum residual pesticides – which were found to have other serious negative health effects. A built-up resistance to chemicals could also be to blame, she says.

Ms. Vod researched hotels on TripAdvisor before finding one she hoped was bed-bug free.

bedbug appearance 300x158 Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?  “I will inspect the room … to make sure,” Ms. Vod wrote in an e-mail before she left for Toronto. “Now because it seems to be all over the news, I’m overstressed.”

Adam Radomsky, an associate psychology professor at Montreal’s Concordia University who is completing a three-year body of work on contamination fears, likens bed-bug disgust and discomfort to what happened with SARS and H1N1.

“Things were very narrow in the beginning for those problems. The anxiety, the fear, the panic spread much further and I think it’s the same phenomenon happening here.”

Fear can take shape even when there isn’t clear evidence of contamination, he says.

“We can feel contaminated thinking about something, remembering something.”

Another problem with bed bugs, says Andrew Keddie, an insect pathologist at the University of Alberta, is that “as a rule, you don’t find them.”

bedbug shell Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?  Their shape – they’re small, dark and have flattened bodies – make them hard to detect, he says. In many cases the bites are the only evidence of bed-bug presence. They’re often flat and itchy and appear in arcs of three on the skin, which are nauseatingly described by some as “breakfast, lunch and dinner.”

After a sleepless night in her Toronto condo in April, Jessica showed up to work groggy and on edge. When her co-workers asked if she was okay, she broke down into tears and confessed she might have bed bugs.

“They said, ‘We’re going to support you, but we’re not going to touch you or go near you,’ ” she recalls.

For Jessica, 26, who did not want her last name used for fear of seeing her property value decline, the pests not only consumed her blood (as evidenced by the bite marks all over her body), but also her thoughts. Could she hug her colleagues? Could she have guests over? Was it okay for her to sleep at a friend’s place?

While she’d dealt with her share of cockroach, mice and ant infestations in previous Toronto apartments, the bed bugs affected her the most, she says.

For weeks, even after two visits by an exterminator who sprayed her apartment, she’d come home from work and search every nook and cranny in the house for bed-bug carcasses.

“I just wanted to find evidence, to find proof they were there,” she says.

On websites such as Bedbugger.com, users – cloaked in anonymity – share tales of how their own bed-bug problems affected their sleep and their ability to concentrate at work. Many confess to feeling shame about their infestations and being labelled as unhygienic – despite the fact that even luxury condos and five-star hotels have been sites of infestations.

In Michelle Heath’s Winnipeg apartment, there’s a light sprinkling of white powder around all the baseboards.

“I look like a cocaine addict,” the 24-year-old office manager says with a laugh. “I just need to know there’s something there.”

A year ago, at her previous residence, Ms. Heath discovered bed bugs just a few weeks after she moved in. Her apartment was sprayed, but it didn’t solve the problem, so she found a new place to live.

During the ordeal, she only told her bosses about the problem – and that was just because she needed time off to deal with it. She feared others at the office would treat her differently if they knew.

“I felt like a total freak because I had bed bugs,” she says. “Do I go to work, do I not go to work?”

While she gets more shut-eye now than she did a year ago – when it was only three or four hours a night – she says thoughts about the bloodsuckers keep her up and have caused her to overthink everything.

“[Bed bugs] poo on your bedding and it’s like little black spots. So any time I see a little black spot, nine times out of 10 it’s lint or something, but I have to look at it right away and figure out what it is,” she says.

bedbug exterminator1 300x225 Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?  In Toronto, the fact that bed bugs are on the rise has alarmed some non-profit organizations and second-hand merchants, as well.

Red Door Family Shelter, a Toronto charity, stopped accepting donations of upholstered furniture and mattresses this spring because of the city’s bed-bug problem.

“We were receiving complaints from our ex-residents who had received [furniture],” Bernnitta Hawkins, the organization’s executive director, says.

The cost of testing furniture for bed bugs is so high that it just made more sense to turn down all couches, armchairs and mattresses, putting the onus on residents to use what little money they have to make such purchases themselves.

Ms. Heath trashed her brand-new $1,000 mattress and all other furniture when she moved to a new apartment, but she still sometimes worries bed bugs may be lurking in various corners of her apartment: hiding in shoes, burrowing under her box spring, scurrying up her bedroom walls at night.

“Even if there hasn’t been one, you’re totally psychologically like, ‘I can feel it! I can feel it!’ ”
Where the bugs are

The following are the top 10 provinces and territories ranked in order of the number of bed-bug treatments Orkin PCO Services performed between September, 2008, and September, 2009.

Ontariobedbug stains 300x193 Are Bedbugs the new dating STD?

British Columbia

Alberta

Quebec

Saskatchewan

Manitoba

Nova Scotia

Newfoundland

New Brunswick

Yukon

Northwest Territories

Article by Dakshana Bascaramurty.  To view the original article, click on the link below:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health/bedbug-fear-worse-than-the-bite/article1714454/page2/

Bedbugs Found in Movie Theater

To view the original article, please click here.

bedbugs in new york Bedbugs Found in Movie TheaterNew York (CNN) — A 25-screen movie theater in New York’s bustling Times Square is the latest city business to shut down temporarily as it battles a bedbug infestation.

The AMC Empire 25 movie theater closed Tuesday night for extermination and reopened Wednesday. According to an AMC spokesman, the closure was part of a two-week follow-up treatment after bedbugs were detected on theater seats in early August.

“Based on our pest control specialists’ recommendation, we retreat theaters two weeks after their initial treatment. In the case of our Empire 25 theater, the two-week follow-up treatment occurred last night, August 17,” AMC Entertainment spokesperson Justin Scott said. “Unfortunately, a guest reported bedbug bites at Empire 25 this past weekend, so we quickly reinspected the auditorium in question and, upon finding bedbugs in that auditorium, we immediately closed it until it received treatment last night.”

The bloodsucking pests were found at another New York AMC location, the Magic Johnson Harlem 9, on July 30. The theater was treated by pest control specialists before being reopened, Scott said.

Reports of bedbugs in New York City have been mounting, with sightings not only in apartment buildings, but also in commercial retail facilities and offices around the city. Hollister, Abercrombie & Fitch and Victoria’s Secret stores, as well as the Time Warner Center, home of CNN’s New York offices, are just a few of the locations that have reported treating for bedbugs.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/08/18/new.york.bedbugs.amc/

“Bedbug Pandemic” Possible Group Warns

CBC news posted a great article warning about a possible bedbug pandemic and its implications for Canada. To read the full article, visit CBC News. Thanks CBC for the great reporting!

“Bedbug pandemic” possible, group warns
By CBC News, Wed Aug 4 2010
large bedbug 300x225 Bedbug Pandemic Possible Group WarnsAn international survey of pest control companies suggests the world is on the verge of a “bedbug pandemic,” says the U.S. National Pest Management Association.

The survey of nearly 1,000 companies, conducted by the University of Kentucky and released last week, found they have experienced an 81 per cent increase in bedbug calls since 2000.

“The results of the 2010 Comprehensive Global Bed Bug Study suggest that we are on the threshold of a bedbug pandemic, not just in the United States, but around the world,” Missy Henriksen, vice-president of public affairs for NPMA, said in a news release.

Several factors are combining to allow the spread of bedbugs. People are travelling more, and the insects tend to hitch a ride on clothing and in suitcases, creating a worldwide distribution network. In addition, many of the pesticides previously used to control them are no longer effective.

“The insecticides that used to be used before, they were fairly toxic and they’re off the market now,” said Christine Noronha, an entomologist with Agriculture Canada.

bedbug closeup 300x298 Bedbug Pandemic Possible Group Warns“So you can’t use that, and they have developed a resistance to a lot of those insecticides anyway.”

Because of their tendency to travel, bedbugs are a particular headache for hotel operators. Most operators these days put their housekeeping staff through specialized training to spot them.

“There seems to be an intensity of bedbugs in hotels,” said Walter VanBeek, president of the Hotel Association of P.E.I.

“Bedbugs can come in on luggage, and once they come into the hotel, they may make this their home.”
Planes, dorms and movie theatres

It is not just a hotel problem. The survey results show domestic cases topped the list for pest control companies, with close to 90 per cent of companies reporting they had treated cases in private homes. College dormitories, public transit and movie theatres were also on the list of bedbug habitats.

Charlottetown exterminator David Herring said he’s seen the signs of the growing problem.

“When I first started we didn’t see that many, a few calls a year,” said Herring.

“I’ve probably done 15, maybe even 20 jobs this year so far.”

Herring said getting rid of bedbugs is a long process. It generally involves two or three trips to a home to spray and steam, and costs hundreds of dollars.

bedbugbitestomach 300x205 Bedbug Pandemic Possible Group Warns“It’s a major endeavour to go through the process and get rid of them completely,” he said.

“Usually from start to finish, you could be talking a couple months.”

Stopping bedbugs from entering your home can be difficult. The best you can do is act quickly once you suspect they’re there, before they multiply and create an even bigger problem.

Freezing Bedbugs? The Latest Alternative to Bedbug Pesticides

bedbugs Freezing Bedbugs?  The Latest Alternative to Bedbug PesticidesThere is  another green alternative to bedbug pesticides on the horizon thanks to inventor Lawrence Chadnik.  Health Canada has given Chadnik the seal of approval to market Cryonite as a bedbug killer.  Cryonite works by quickly freezing the bedbugs to death using pressurized carbon dioxide snow. The below article provides more information about this interesting new bedbug eliminating technology.

To view the original article, please click here.

Congratulations to Lawrence for providing a new poison free method for killing bedbugs to the Canadian market.

A New Weapon Hunts Bedbugs

By Scott Taylor, QMI Agency

In the war on bedbugs, pesticides aren’t always the answer.

As the population of the tiny creepy crawlers grows, not every hotel and home can stay vacated, sometimes for days, while chemicals to the job.

Lawrence Chadnik thinks he has the answer. The owner of Rest Assured MC says Cryonite kills the pests effectively without the use of harmful chemicals. Cryonite is carbon dioxide snow that is pressurized. When it’s applied it kills bedbugs by freezing them to death instantly.

It took Chadnik two long years to get Health Canada approval, but all systems are go — and not a moment too soon.

“Bedbugs are such a huge problem,” he said. “They were a problem two years ago and they’re twice the problem now.”

He said no one is immune because bedbugs can be picked up anywhere and brought home. Their eggs are extremely sticky and can survive in all sorts of conditions.

“There are a lot of different reasons people have them. One of them is travelling and picking up bedbugs in hotels. You can get them in movie theatres and anywhere. They’re hitchhikers, so if somebody has bedbug eggs on their pants and they go to a movie theatre the next one in picks them up and brings them home. You don’t know you have them for a month, but then you do.”

Once he convinced the government that a strong, green counterattack could be mounted, he set his sights on marketing the system.

“The product is going to be marketed to pest-control companies, hotels, hospitals, anywhere there are beds. They can use this green treatment to get rid of them and someone can go into the room right after without fear of toxins,” he said. “A hotel can go and treat a room and somebody can sleep in this room without sleeping with chemicals to breathe in.”

New Jersey-based Stern Environmental Group owner Douglas Stern said the need for a more environmentally friendly method has multiplied as the pests have. He said that while no one has seen them yet, it’s believed bedbugs are now in mass transit.

“We know they’re there, even if we haven’t seen them, and that means everyone can pick them up.”

But the Cryonite works, he said, because of the sudden change in temperature.

“You can’t do it slowly. Put them in a freezer and take them out in six months and they’ll still be alive.”

Bedbugs at Hollister in New York City

We are a little late in reporting this story, but feel it is important due to the stigma that currently surrounds bedbug infestations.  There is allegedly a severe bedbug infestation at the Hollister’s Soho New York City location.  Apparently the problem was reported to by two employees of the store but the corporate office was hesitant to take action.  Only time will tell how many employees and shoppers will trace new bedbug infestations back to this store and the 3 week delay in taking proper action.  Where do you think the vermin will hit next?  For more information, here is an article pulled from New York Magazine: (http://nymag.com/daily/fashion/2010/07/soho_hollister_closed_due_to_b.html)

Hollister Soho bedbugs 300x225 Bedbugs at Hollister in New York City

The 40,000-square-foot “epic” Hollister in Soho is currently undergoing a similarly epic extermination to eradicate the reportedly epic bedbug infestation that forced the store to close yesterday. A sign on the store says it is closed for “maintenance,” but a Hollister spokesperson confirmed that bedbugs were running amok. In a place where models are hired to stand around practically naked, the bites can’t be easy to hide if the store is to maintain the integrity of its dress code. But the problem had gotten so bad that one employee found a bedbug and bedbug shell hanging off her clothes, according to a fellow employee who wrote to Gothamist about the problem. According to this person, an employee and manager first reported the bedbugs three weeks ago, but Hollister ignored the problem:

hollister bedbug models 300x184 Bedbugs at Hollister in New York CityOn Tuesday the 29th, an employee found that she had been bitten, and also found a live bedbug and an exoskeleton on her borrowed Hollister outfit. All of the employees were forced to continue working even though more and more bugs were being discovered.

Multiple employees were covered in bites. Hollister was more concerned about losing money than the health and safety of their hundreds of employees and thousands of customers. If they were concerned in the least, the store would have been shut down the moment the first bugs were discovered. Just today they closed the store down, but who knows how many employees and customers were exposed to the outbreak in the past three weeks, only jeopardizing the rest if the stores in the area as bedbugs spread like wildfire.

Bedbugs only feed at night, and if you’ve ever been inside Hollister, you know that it is almost completely dark. I’m sure you can imagine the store has become a bedbug breeding ground since it was first exposed. Go Hollister!

Well, now we can start calling it the bedbug Hollister instead of the “epic” Hollister. If you’ve been in the store the past few weeks, you risked the chance of carrying the bedbugs home with you. The good news is that if you’ve recently discovered bedbugs, at least one lawyer would be happy to help you sue! He spoke to The Wall Street Journal:

“Technically it’s a breach of warranty of merchantability,” said Michael M. Martin, a professor at Fordham University School of Law. “They are defective because they don’t meet consumer expectation. The usual remedy for that, first of all you can get price back and, second, you might well be able to recover for the consequential injuries. I’d be willing to take that case.”

Shopping in there was frightening enough before all this.