Advocating policy to control the spread of bed bugs in the City of Chicago

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“Battling Bed Bugs in the USA”: A Must Read 4

Posted on April 13, 2009 by Jessica

Ah, bed bugs. So many questions, so few answers. Such is the nature of the beast, even for the experts. I think that’s one of the biggest challenges we face: if the experts don’t have all the answers, and if new questions arise every day, then how the heck is everyone else supposed to understand the intricacies and complexities presented by bed bug infestations?

I don’t know, but what I do know is that we need to learn and teach, share good information, make what is understood and known to be true easily accessible and available to everyone.

So, in the spirit of doing just that, I offer you a fantastic synopsis of the (bed bug) state of affairs in America, written by experts Michael Potter, Alvaro Romero, and Kenneth Haynes.  Battling Bed Bugs in the USA was originally presented at the Sixth International Conference on Urban Pests held in Hungary in 2008, and was recently made available to the public, as our friend Renee reported.

The following is a cut-and-paste summary of the paper (emphasis is mine), highlighting some of its most interesting and most important information.  Want to know the truth about bed bugs in America now?  Get a glimpse into the future?  Find out what the answer might be?  Read on, my friends.

The Truth about the Future

The bed bug problem in the United States is expected to worsen with no resolution in sight.

Public awareness is improving, but businesses, municipalities and private citizens must become vigilant in regard to prevention. Hotels are beginning to implement in-house surveillance in order to detect infestations early, but this is more difficult in multi-unit housing, college dormitories, and other establishments where clutter and other constraints make it harder to inspect on a routine basis.

Municipalities have begun debating the responsibilities of property managers and tenants relative to bed bug remediation. Some cities are also considering legislation banning the sale of used and recycled mattresses, and instituting a telephone ‘hotline’ that can be called for removal of infested items before they are scavenged by others.

The Truth about the Present

In an online survey of 509 U.S. pest control firms, 91% encountered bed bugs in the past two years, whereas only 37% recalled seeing them five years ago. Perpetual movement of people, zero tolerance for bug bites, marginally effective management tools, and health concerns about pesticides have created the most difficult pest challenge in a generation. Infestations are occurring in homes, apartments, hotels, dormitories, health care facilities, schools, laundries, movie theaters, and public transportation.

The Truth about Why (We Don’t Know Why)

Various hypotheses have attempted to explain the rapid resurgence of bed bugs in this country which became noticeable in the late-1990s. They include: increased travel to and from areas of the world where the bugs remained common; increased exchange of second-hand furniture and a lack of vigilance by the public; a shift from premise-wide use of broad-spectrum insecticides to more selective control tactics for other urban pests; and insecticide resistance (Doggett et al., 2004; Potter, 2005). While the above factors presumably contributed to the resurgence, it remains a mystery why bed bug populations have increased so quickly after being so scarce for so long.

How are Bed Bugs Harmful?  And to Whom? (Part One)

The hospitality and housing industries are especially apprehensive, fearing adverse publicity and lawsuits. So are colleges and universities who are finding bed bugs in their dormitories. Today’s bed bug infestations raise complex questions about society’s right to know of potentially harmful conditions. Few establishments are willing to admit they have had bed bugs, yet failure to disclose may be used against them in a court of law. The hesitancy to report bed bugs and a lack of public awareness are helping to spread infestations. Notifying tenants or guests of a bed bug problem, however, can be a property manager’s worst nightmare.

How are Bed Bugs Harmful?  And to Whom? (Part Two)

Ignorance and aversion to bed bugs also continues to be present among health care providers (Scarupa, 2006). A few years ago, we had a case where a child was sent home from school because the nurse said she had chicken pox. Two different dermatologists subsequently examined her, one believing she had flea bites and the other, scabies. Neither physician bothered to ask if the family had been traveling or had acquired used furnishings. The family had in fact received two donated beds (both infested with bed bugs) just before the welts started appearing.

Another client informed us that two different caregiver agencies refused to visit her after learning she had bed bugs, fearing they would take bed bugs home with them. Another caregiver agency opted to call a hazardous materials (HAZMAT) unit to deal with a bed bug-bitten man because of concerns over blood-borne pathogens.

How are Bed Bugs Harmful?  And to Whom? (Part Three)

Although bed bugs are not known to transmit human pathogens, infection resulting from bites is a possibility. Health officials in the U.S. have become particularly concerned about methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) outbreaks in healthcare settings, schools, fitness centers, and other communal facilities.

Why Inspection is so Difficult

Correct diagnosis of a bed bug problem is important. Older established infestations are fairly easy to detect; but in the early stages, they can be much more subtle.

One reason bed bug elimination is so challenging is that they can hide almost anywhere. Most aggregations reside near a sleeping host, but as infestations persist, others are found in various locations within several meters of the bed.

Based on our industry survey, the most common areas for finding bed bugs were beds (mentioned by 85% of respondents), bedding (mentioned by 52%), baseboards/carpet edges (37%), furniture such as nightstands and dressers (26%), couches and chairs (25%), walls and ceilings (14%), and clothing (6%).

When inspecting multi-occupancy dwellings such as hotels and apartments, most survey respondents (91%) said they routinely recommend inspecting surrounding units adjacent to infested units. This seems prudent considering other industry surveys have found adjoining units to be infested much of the time (J. Black, pers. comm)

No reliable and affordable detection device is presently available for monitoring bed bugs except keen eyes and a flashlight.

Do Vacuums and Steamers Work?

Routine vacuuming by clients is seldom of much benefit because the bugs hide in places where normal housecleaning efforts do not reach. Targeted vacuuming of infested harborages, however, can be useful if performed properly and limits of the procedure are understood. Bed bugs are not so easily dislodged with vacuums. In comparison to cockroaches, the adults and nymphs cling more tightly to surfaces and the eggs are affixed with a cement-like substance. Better results are achieved by scraping the end of the suction wand repeatedly over the harborage area. Removal becomes difficult if not impossible when the bed bugs are located deep within crevices, and one should assume that some bugs and eggs will be left behind.

Commercial units employed by pest controllers emit small amounts of moisture to lessen the possibility of mold growth, and have a large enough tank to accommodate extended use between fill-ups. Larger brush heads usually work better than small diameter tips which are less efficient and often emit too much pressure, causing bugs and eggs to be blown off the substrate. When using steam, it is important that the bed bugs be exposed to lethal temperatures. The steamer head is moved slowly, and whenever possible, maintained in direct contact with the substrate being treated. A digital infrared thermometer pointed at the area just treated can be used to confirm lethal temperatures (65-85°C) are being achieved. Typical places where steamers are being used include beds, couches and upholstered furniture, baseboards and carpet edges. In combination with, or in lieu of vacuums, they are useful but afford no residual protection against bugs or eggs which may have been missed (Potter et al., 2007).

What About Pesticides?

Most U.S. pest control firms rely on insecticides to control bed bugs.  The most widely used products are pyrethroids which is concerning given the high levels of resistance detected throughout the U.S. (Romero et al., 2007ab). Most indoor uses of organophosphate and carbamate insecticides which often controlled bed bugs with a single treatment are no longer permitted, and there are no highly effective alternatives.

Most pest managers treat wherever bed bugs are found and anywhere they are likely to crawl or hide. For this reason, treatment often takes hours and the amount of insecticide applied is substantial, often exceeding 3.8 liters for a typical apartment. Nearly three-fourths (74%) of companies surveyed said they typically spray beds, and of those that do, 76% spray both the mattress and box spring. Before the resurgence of bed bugs, most pest managers would have shunned treating beds with insecticides. Bed bugs have changed the dynamic and in doing so, increased the likelihood of pesticide-related claims and litigation.

Is There an Answer?

The pest management industry will become more skilled at managing infestations, but people’s intolerance of bed bugs and their bites will pose many challenges. So will the depleted arsenal of effective insecticides and apprehensions about applying pesticides in the very places they are needed. The future of bed bug management could well hinge upon having a residually potent product with a wide margin of safety and similarly permissive label. This was what changed the course of bed bug management more than a half century ago. Without a 21st century version of DDT we may be in for quite a struggle.

Loyola University Chicago: Bed Bugs as Recently as January 0

Posted on April 01, 2009 by Jessica

Yep, it’s true, at least according to the March 25, 2009 edition of Loyola University Chicago’s student newspaper, The Phoenix.

Rayna Costanzo, in Don’t let the bed bugs bite: A reemergence of the pests puts residents on alert says

Brian Johnson, associate director of Residence Life, said Loyola has had problems with bed bugs in the past, most recently this January.

“Whenever we have a suspected bed bug problem, we immediately call in the extermination company that works with the institution,” Johnson said. “The company will set traps, inspect the apartment and determine what the problem is.”

It’s really important to hire a professional pest management company with experience and training in treating bed bug infestations. As long as Loyola’s extermination company fills the bill, they’re on the right track.

I can’t help but wonder about those traps, though.  See, traps that are commonly used to detect roaches and other bugs just don’t work with bed bugs.  That’s because bed bugs aren’t attracted to them.  Bed bugs feed solely on the blood of humans, remember, so they’re attracted to, well, us.  Perhaps Loyola’s exterminator uses a trap that’s specifically designed for bed bugs, like the CDC 3000, which “mimics the presence of a human body” by emitting “CO2, heat, and the chemical equivalent to body odor to attract even incipient levels of bed bugs.”

In any case, it sounds like the folks over at Loyola take great measures to prevent the spread of bed bugs throughout campus:

If bed bugs are found in an apartment on campus, Johnson said that students are relocated and are not permitted to bring anything out of the room in order to prevent the highly transmittable bugs from spreading.

This is a really, really good idea.  This, however, might not be:

Furniture is discarded, mattresses are discarded and the carpet is steam cleaned throughout the apartment,” Johnson said.

Steam cleaning? Good. Discarding furniture and mattresses? Not so good, unless it’s done at the suggestion and under the direct supervision of a qualified pest management professional. Why? Because bed bug infestations are spread throughout cities (and college campuses, I’d guess) on infested furniture that’s been discarded without proper sealing and without proper warning to people who might pick it up and take it home with them. Infested furniture must be sealed– and I’m talking airtight, people– before it’s discarded, because bed bugs and eggs can fall off during the disposal process. Think of all the places that might exposed to bed bugs when furniture is dragged outside: hallways, other rooms, lobbies… Who knows?

I can’t help but think that it would be fantastic if our city made all of this information– along with a standard protocol for people to follow and maybe some mattress stickers (Caution!  Bed Bugs!) and maybe even a hotline for people to call to report bed bug infestations and request information about how to handle them properly– easily accessible to the general public.  So does at least one Loyola student, and I don’t blame her a bit.  Phoenix editor LeeAnn Maton says

…Illinois officials have been recieving a relatively high volume of complaints for a year.  A year? Couldn’t we have a tracking system in place by now? Or an Excel spreadsheet at least? As a Chicago resident, I’d love to know what buildings near me are infested. You know, so I can avoid, say, moving into one.

A city-wide publicity campaign to educate citizens about the signs, symptoms and preventative measures is long overdue.

A centralized resource for handling bed bug complaints is also necessary. Currently, the Chicago Department of Health doesn’t handle complaints because bed bugs, though disgusting, don’t carry or spread diseases.

LeeAnn sounds a heck of a lot like some other people we know. Ahem.

It sounds to me like Loyola’s on top of the problem on its campus.  Let’s hope the City of Chicago follows suit, soon, or Loyola– and lots of other people– will be dealing with bed bugs all over again.

Stop Bedbugs DC Summit a Huge Success 2

Posted on March 29, 2009 by Jessica

I received an email yesterday from Silvia Salazar of Norwood Tenant Association, the phenomenal lady I wrote about here.  Silvia wrote to fill me in on the Stop Bedbugs DC Summit, which she helped create and organize.  Silvia had great news to share– the summit, sponsored in part by the DC Department of Health, was a huge success.  In fact, Silvia says

We had over 120 organizations in attendance. Many were interested in developing a task force and offered resources and expertise.

A fire alarm went off after lunch and we had to exit the building. We were concerned that people would loose interest and leave. We were gladly surprised to see them return after we were cleared to return to the building. Guess the summit attendees were as tenacious as bedbugs.

Or the summit attendees really understood exactly how tenacious bed bugs can be!

These are just a few of the photos taken during the summit. My favorite is the top middle picture. What this photo says to me is that people are talking and listening to each other; they’re trying to determine what needs to be done, which bases need to be covered right away, and how they can work together to address the spread of bed bugs in Washington DC.  As I mentioned here, the summit included all of the following:

  • Expert entomologists
  • Experienced industry professionals
  • Stakeholders
  • Discussion of pertinent and time-sensitive issues:
    • legislation
    • enforcement
    • citizen involvement through tenant groups, senior and public housing
  • Educational outreach
  • Government and local business participation
  • Empowering people who are affected by bed bugs to take action and combat the problem

Wonder if we could pull something like this off here in Chicago?  I hope so.  The Stop Bedbugs DC Summit was an important first step for the stakeholders in DC who are interested in developing a task force– and a strategic plan– to control bed bug infestations there.

Again, we at Chicago vs. Bed Bugs commend all of the organizers, speakers, and attendees who participated in the Stop Bedbugs DC Summit on March 27th.  You are on the right track, and we’re so grateful to you for setting an example for everyone.

*Special thanks to Silvia Salazar for sending summit updates and photos.



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