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Bed Bugs – PestWorld
Bed bugs (picture on the left) likely get their name from their habit of feeding on humans while they sleep in their beds. They are found in virtually every place people tend to gather, including residences, hotels, schools, offices, retail stores and even public transportation.
If you do identify bed bugs in your home, contact a pest professional promptly. They will be able to inspect your home, confirm the species and recommend a course of bed bug treatment.
Bed bugs like to travel and are good hitchhikers. They will hide in suitcases, boxes and shoes to be near a food supply. They are elusive, nocturnal creatures. They can hide behind baseboards and in cracks, crevices, and folded areas of beds, bedding and adjacent furniture, especially mattresses and box springs. Bed bugs can also hide in electrical switchplates, picture frames, wallpaper and nearly anywhere inside a home, car, bus, or other shelter. Bed bugs usually come out at night for a blood meal. However, they are opportunistic insects and can take a blood meal during the day, especially in heavily-infested areas. Bed bugs usually require 5-10 minutes to engorge with blood. After feeding, they move to secluded places and hide for 5-10 days. During this time in the bed bug life cycle, they do not feed but instead digest their meal, mate, and lay eggs.
So where do bed bugs live? Bed Bugs like to hide in small cracks and crevices close to a human environment. They can be found behind baseboards, wallpaper, upholstery, and in furniture crevices. Beg bugs are also known to survive in temporary or alternative habitats, such as backpacks and under the seats in cars, busses and trains.
Although bed bugs can dine on any warm-blooded animal, they primarily dine on humans. Bed bugs do not transmit diseases, but their bites can become red, itchy welts.
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Bed Bugs - PestWorld
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Bed Bugs, Cimex lectularius – New York State Integrated …
What they look like Adults look like apple seeds with legs. Young bed bugsnymphslook like adults, only smaller. Newly hatched nymphs are poppy seed-sized. Eggs are tiny white, and hard to spot.
Where they live In cracks and crevices of bed frames, floors, walls, furniture, electronics, mattresses, and luggage. Wedge themselves into anything, but usually near where people rest. What they do Feed on you as you sleep, but if youre not around they can go over a year without food. Bites look like a rash or weltsor you may not notice them at all. Bed bugs dont transmit disease.
Dont bring home hitchhikers: Traveling? Inspect your hotel room before you call it a night. Examine your luggage thoroughly with each new place you go. Wash and dry clothes with hot water and high heat as soon as you get home.
Freeze it: Bag small items; place in your freezer for 30 days.
Buying used furniture, bedding, clothes? Inspect thoroughly. Wash and dry bedding and clothes with hot water, high heat. Steam is an option, but make sure stuff dries out so it doesn't mold.
Check everywhere: Keep bedroom furniture an inch or two from the wall and a flashlight handy for easier cleaning and inspecting. Bed bug-proof mattress covers and light-colored bedding make them easier to spot.
Remove: Say goodbye to clutter in your bedroom to get rid of bed bug hiding spots. Getting rid of stuff? Cover in plastic so bugs dont fall off and make sure the items are in a dumpster or ruined so people dont take them home.
Vacuum often: Floors, walls, mattresses, baseboards, furniture ... Get rid of the vacuum bag as soon as youre done in case you sucked up a bed bug.
Pesticide options: Leave it to the professionals. Some sprays simply repel bed bugs, spreading them around. Make sure pesticides are labeled specifically for bed bugs. Always read and follow the instructions on the label.
Bed bugs are back! An IPM answer. 388k pdf file
Bed bug FAQs
Bed Bug Fact Sheet at Cornell's Insect Diagnostic Laboratory
Bed Bug ManagementOne Step at a Time! Fact Sheets
Step 1: Inspection, 2.4Mb pdf file
Paso 1: Inspeccin y Identificacin 2.5Mb pdf file
Step 2: Get Rid of Clutter, 244k pdf file
Paso 2: Reducir el Desorden 243k pdf file
Step 3: Vacuum Here, There, Everywhere, 250k pdf file
Paso 3: Pase la Aspiradora por Aqu, All y en Todas las Partes 250k pdf file
Step 4: Clean Mattress and Bed Frame, 216k pdf file
Paso 4: Limpia el Colchn y el Armazn de la Cama, 232k pdf file
Step 5: Heat Treat Everything Thats Safe to Wash, 272k pdf file
Paso 5: Trate con el Calor Todo lo que es Seguro para Lavar, 272k pdf file
Step 6: Make Your Bed an Island, 609k pdf file
Paso 6: Haga su Cama como una Isla, 609k pdf file
Step 7: How to Dispose of an Infested Mattress, 355k pdf file
Paso 7: Cmo Deshacerse de un Colchn Infestado, 355k pdf file
Dealing with Bed Bugs in Multifamily Housing 560k pdf file
Tratando con chinches en Viviendas Multifamiliares 560k pdf file
Prepare for a Visit by a Pest Management Professional 590k pdf file
Preprese para una Visita de un Profesional de Control de Plagas 590k pdf file
Tips for Travelers 530k pdf file
Consejos Para Viajeros 530k pdf file
Presentations
Bed Bug ManagementOne Step at a Time! Step 1: Inspection
Inspeccin y Identificacin Para las Chinches
Bed Bug ManagementOne Step at a Time! Steps 2-7
Manejo Integrado de Plagas Por ChinchesUn Paso a la Vez! Pasos 2-7
Prepare for a Visit from a Pest Management Professional
Preprese para una Visita de un Profesional de Control de Plagas
Dealing with Bed Bugs in Multifamily Housing
Tratando con Chinches en Viviendas Multifamiliares
Tips for Travelers
Consejos Para Viajeros
For Travelers and College Students: Wallet-sized bed bug information cards, 2Mb pdf file. After download, print them using Avery Label 5820
How to Talk to Callers about Bed Bugs, a guide for master gardeners. 220k pdf file
Guidelines for Prevention and Management of Bed Bugs in Shelters and Group Living Facilities.
DDT is not effective against bed bugs, 142k pdf file
Stop Bed Bugs Safely
Pare los Chinches de Cama sin Riesgos
Contact your local Cornell Cooperative Extension office.
... and search our database of online publications.
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Bed Bugs, Cimex lectularius - New York State Integrated ...
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CDC – NIOSH Science Blog Bed Bugs!
Just try to sleep tight. The bed bugs are back, a New York Times headline proclaimed in 2005. The article reported on a resurgence of reports about infestations of tiny Cimex lectularius in New York City. These stealthy and fast-moving nocturnal creatures that were all but eradicated by DDT after World War II, have recently been found in hospital maternity wards, private schools and even a plastic surgeons waiting room, the article stated.1
The New York experience is not unique. Around the world, pest control specialists have reported 10-fold, 100-fold, even 1,000-fold increases in bed bug jobs over the past five or ten years, according to pest control consultants Lawrence J. Pinto, Richard Cooper, and Sandy Kraft.2
Bed bugs have been a nuisance to humans at least as far back as ancient Greece. Although largely eradicated in the Western countries in the 1940s with the aggressive use of pesticides, notably DDT, they began to re-emerge in the mid-1990s. Entomologists and pest control specialists believe that several factors may contribute to this trend. These factors include the continuing decline or elimination of effective vector/pest control programs at state and local public health agencies, increased resistance to various insecticides, and an increase in international travel, which raises the chances that the tiny pests will be unknowingly packed into luggage.3
Bed bugs are not known to transmit disease, but they are a troublesome health nuisance. Their bites can cause mild to severe allergic reactions, and people living in infested homes have reported anxiety, insomnia, and systemic reactions.4 These bites dont just occur at home. Using workers compensation (WC) claims data from California between 2000 and 2011, the California Department of Public Health identified 96 workers who were bitten by bed bugs while traveling for work. The majority of bed bug-related WC claims in California consisted of complaints of bed bug bites or rashes caused from bites; however there were several reports of physical injuries (such as strains) sustained by workers while moving furniture to look for or treat bed bugs. (More information on work-related insecticide exposures is provided below.)
For apartment owners and managers, hotels and motels, and other businesses involving the stewardship of property, a bed bug infestation can be a serious business cost in remediation expenses, public stigma, and lawsuits.5 The annoyance, economic costs, frustration and emotional agony of bed bug infestations may tempt business owners and homeowners to take extreme measures. However, a recent study by NIOSH scientists and their colleagues highlights the need to be informed and strategic in dealing with the problem, so that tackling one problem does not introduce greater health risks of another kind.
Bed bug infestations often are treated with insecticides, but insecticide resistance is a problem, and excessive use of insecticides or improper application can increase the potential for illness in humans. To better understand the problem of illness associated with bed bug-related insecticide, investigators looked for cases using the Sentinel Event Notification System for Occupational Risks (SENSOR) Pesticides program and data from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. A total of 110 illnesses and one fatality associated with bed bug-related insecticide were identified in seven states: California, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Texas, and Washington.
The most frequently reported health outcomes were neurologic symptoms (40%), including headache and dizziness; respiratory symptoms (40%), including upper respiratory tract pain and irritation and dyspnea; and gastrointestinal symptoms (33%), including nausea and vomiting. Most (81%) symptoms were of low severity. The individual whose death was linked to bed-bug related insecticide had a series of preexisting medical conditions and was exposed to high levels of insecticide through atypical applications.6
The most common factors contributing to illness were excessive insecticide application, failure to wash or change pesticide-treated bedding, and inadequate notification of pesticide application. The majority of insecticide exposures were to pyrethroids and/or pyrethrins, and were in toxicity category III and are considered to be slightly toxic.
Among the cases of illnesses from bed bug-related insecticide, 12% were work-related. Of these, three illnesses involved workers who applied pesticides, including two pest control operators, of whom one was a certified applicator. Four cases involved workers who were unaware of pesticide applications (e.g., two carpet cleaners who cleaned an apartment recently treated with pesticides). Two cases involved hotel workers (a maintenance worker and a manager) who were exposed when they entered a recently treated hotel room, and two cases involved emergency medical technicians who responded to a scene where they found white powder thought to be an organophosphate pesticide.
To prevent future illness from bed bug-related insecticides, NIOSH recommends educating the public about effective bed bug management including:
Those who choose to treat their bed bug infestation with insecticides should seek the services of a certified exterminator who uses an integrated pest management approach to avoid pesticide misuse. Those applying insecticides should follow product instructions for safe and appropriate use. Insecticide labels that are easy to read and understand also can help prevent illnesses associated with bed bug control.
If individuals develop an illness from exposure to bed-bug related insecticides, they should consult their personal physician or the poison control center (1-800-222-1222) and mention that the insecticide exposure occurred while attempting to eliminate bed bugs.
If bed bugs are a problem where you live or work, be bright in your fight and dont let the bed bugs bite!
Dr. Howard is the Director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
Dr. Hudsonis an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer at NIOSH
Dr. Calvert is a Team Leader and Senior Medical Epidemiologist in the NIOSH Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies
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CDC - NIOSH Science Blog Bed Bugs!
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