Bed Bug Epidemic growing
Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 9:59PM Bed bugs are becoming a growing epidemic across the country in both hotel rooms and college dormitories. These bed bugs could live for up to 6 months in extreme weather conditions. Many colleges and universities are working on reducing the life span of the mattresses they have in their dormitories due to this growing problem.
Bed bugs are becoming a growing problem in many major metropolitan areas and the problem is growing at a very alarming and disturbing rate. There has been a great deal of interest that has also been placed in the mattress manufactuing industry, it is very common in the industry for the mattresses that are removed from a customer are placed in the same delivery truck that is sent to deliver new mattreses. This may cause the bed bug larvae to be found in the same truck that may be delivering your new mattress to your house.
To read more about bed bugs check out the link at
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/bedbugs/
Bed Bug Video
New York Lags in Regulating Bed Bugs
By E.B. SOLOMONT, Staff Reporter of the Sun | September 29, 2008
In response to a growing bed bug epidemic, a number of cities across the nation have adopted new measures to identify and eradicate bed bug infestations � and others, including New York, are exploring such moves.
In Boston and in San Francisco, regulations imposed in the past few years outline strict protocols for exterminating bed bugs and for disposing of infested mattresses and belongings.
"I do not think New Yorkers have a place to go now," a City Council member who has been a vocal proponent of stricter bed bug regulations, Gale Brewer, said. Ms. Brewer, who has called for legislation governing the sale of used mattresses, last month sent a letter to the mayor's office requesting a meeting of the agencies tasked with bed bug-related issues, including housing and health and mental hygiene.
"I do think the mayor's office, led by the health department, should be coordinating these agencies," she said in an interview, in which she called for a bed bug task force that would meet regularly and would lead a response to the city's bed bug problem.
In San Francisco, bed bugs are considered a "public health nuisance" and in 2007, the city's Department of Public Health published guidelines for controlling infestations. Under the guidelines, residents are discouraged from placing contaminated items on the curb without sealing the items in plastic and marking them as infested.
Regulations also require property managers to respond to bed bug complaints within 48 hours and to execute a plan of action within 72 hours. Exterminators are instructed to apply pesticide no fewer than three times � or at least once every two weeks, three times in a row.
Failure to comply with the rules carries a fine of up to $1,000 or up to five days in jail, according to the author of the guidelines, Johnson Ojo, who is a principal health inspector for San Francisco's health department. Mr. Ojo said the rules were established to address an increase in bed bug complaints. Mr. Ojo said that in 2006, when the rules were put into effect, the department received 308 bed bug complaints, up from 24 in 2003. "We wanted to address the needs of our citizens without ignoring the problems that they wanted to see the officials address," he said.
In Boston, a bed bug sighting warrants a visit from the city's Inspection Services Department, which documents the problem. The property manager or owner then has to file an integrated pest management plan for dealing with the problem, and inspectors follow up until the case is closed.
Owners also must "treat all horizontally and vertically adjacent units," according to the Inspectional Services Department, and those disposing of infested mattresses, clothing, or other belongings must use bright orange stickers to identify the infested items.
In New York City, the lack of similar regulation so far stems from a disagreement over which city agency should handle bed bugs, according to some critics, including Ms. Brewer.
In most cases, the Department of Housing Preservation and Development responds to complaints about bed bugs. The health department does not, since bed bugs are not known to transmit disease.
But Ms. Brewer said the health and mental hygiene department is ignoring the anxiety and mental health issues experienced by individuals whose homes are infested. "They will not take responsibility on the health front, period, end of discussion," she said. "I'm told by the Commissioner of Health, 'Gale, bed bugs don't create any illness,'" she said. "They refuse to believe there is any physical harm from bed bugs."
A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Jessica Scaperotti, said agency officials know that bed bug infestations can be unpleasant and stressful, and she said the health department has focused on education and prevention through its fact sheet on bed bugs. Since the beginning of 2006, the health department has distributed 60,000 fact sheets in English and Spanish. "While bed bugs are a nuisance, they do not present a health risk, and they do not spread disease," she said.
Youtube Bed Bug Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lpkTC3bs4Cg
Chuck |
7 Comments | 

Reader Comments (7)
I thought I remember hearing about mattress companies selling used mattresses as reconditioned mattresses, but only swapping the top layer of the mattress. Does anyone know of cases that have happened in Ohio. Original Mattress Factory or one of the big companies were exposed on a local channel I thought.
We are trying to work with The Original Mattress Factory to help them recycle their mattresses. We have been trying for 6 months and we have yet to receive any mattresses from them. It is discerning to know that hundreds or thousands of mattresse per month are being buried when they could be recycled at similiar costs.
Ken,
Many companies sell themselves as mattress recyclers, but do not actually recycle the materials, and some actually reuse the materials, which may help save costs and valuable natural resources if done ethically, but many companies are not treating the materials and spreading the bed bug epidemic. Thanks for your comment.
Why people are looking to bed bugs solutions only when it’s too late? Because they are unaware of the symptoms until they develop severe allergies. In order to know how to get rid of bed bugs you must learn first the life and behavior of them. Those insect are almost the tiniest bugs in the world. Their size is estimated on 5 micro millimeter and they usually habitat in moist warm areas like your bed, closets, carpets and sometime even inside wood furniture.
I Will continue to follow the development of your next websites, thank you, please do not forget to link me, thank you
if is make well as recondition..no problem
Deterrent will kill bed bugs under certain very specific circumstances, but not all bed bugs. (The substance must reach a certain vapor pressure, which then causes an effect similar to fumigation, and this may only be attained in an airtight container). Naphthalene will not normally kill bed bugs, it is purely a deterrent. It will not deter all Bed Bugs either. I got demisted beetles (carpet beetles) in some stuff, and the bags were well dosed with naphthalene. They ate through the bags as well.