Monthly Archives: June 2017

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Mother says motel refuses to take responsibility for bedbugs – WSB Atlanta

by: Nicole Carr Updated: Jun 13, 2017 - 11:52 PM

UNION CITY, Ga. - A Union City mother told Channel 2 Action News that she came home to find her daughter covered in bedbugs.

The family lives at an extended stay motel and Schlendia Robinson told Channel 2s Nicole Carr she cant afford to move.

A manager at the motel told Carr he's aware of this case but believes the woman or her guests may have brought the critters in.

Robinson and other residents saidthey're being blamed for a mattress issue that existed before they checked in.

If I could stay somewhere else I would. I don't want to be here, Robinson told Carr.

Robinson moved her five children into the Union City Extended Stay motel last month after the familylost its home due to financial issues.

I work two full-time jobs to be able to stay here, Robinson said.

When she saw the marks all over her 3-year-old daughter, she thought they may have come from playing outside.

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Last week, Robinson said, when she pulled the covers and mattress pads back on her daughters bed, she found the bugs.

And that's when they were out all over my daughter's face," Robinson told Carr.

The Robinsons and other residents told Carr they've been transferred to other rooms.

Carr found several old mattresses being aired out but the hotel management is refusing to take responsibility for the bugs.

Did they suggest that you all brought them as well? Carr asked another resident.

Oh yes! I was informed that I brought them in, but I said, 'Wait a minute. I'm too clean-natured. I don't do bugs, so why would you say that?" the resident told Carr.

Carr spoke with a manager who wouldn't rule out the possibility of the guests bringing the bugs in.

He said legitimate complaints get residents moved to new rooms while they perform pest control, but there's no offer of reimbursement and he said he's unaware of past outbreaks.

Residents have forwarded complaints to the Fulton County Health Department, but records were not immediately available.

People who say they don't have many residential optionsare now looking for a quicksolution to the bedbug problem.

My daughter is swollen. She's been scratching. She hasn't been able to sleep comfortable. I need to understand what's happening. How could you guys allow this to happen? Robinson said.

Urgent care medical recordsconfirm that Robinsons daughter is dealing with a bedbug issue.

A friend set up a GoFundMe page if you would like to help.

If you're afraid you might have a bedbug issue, the Fulton County Health Department has some ways to help get rid of them.

2017 Cox Media Group.

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Exterminator says bed bugs becoming more common – WPSD Local 6

BENTON, Ky -

They're small. They bite. They spread fast. Exterminator Lemuel Gourley, owner of Bluegrass Termites and Pest Control,said he has been getting calls daily about bed bugs.

Gourley said you willknow right away if you have bed bugs, because they are easy to find.But they are hard to get rid of.Check under your mattress near where you lay your head and check in your favorite chair in your house, because that is where they like to hide. Gourley said they can go anywhere though, like in floorboards and window sills.

He also said to look at your body. If you have bites from your torsoand up,you probablyhave bed bugs.

Bluegrass Termites and Pest Control uses a chemical treatment to get rid of those pests. "(We use) some really good aerosol sprays...and some liquid base treatments,with bed covers," he said. "It's a whole package that works." There are other types of treatments that work as well, like heat treatments,

Gourley saidbed bugs are persistent, soyour house may have to be treated more than once. "We don't require them to do another treatment, but it's good to do two treatments, 30 days apart, so that you make sure that you get everything," he said.

Bed bug treatments can cost anywhere from $250 to $1500 depending on how bad the infestation is.

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Exterminator says bed bugs becoming more common - WPSD Local 6

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Bed Bugs Saskatchewan – Focus Canada Saskatchewan bed bug …

A Bed Bug Dog is the best tool in the fight against Bed Bugs.Our trained canines use their incredibly adept sense of smell to locate bed bugs in even the most hidden of areas, and in places where people cannot see. Using the canine can save you money by not over exterminating areas that do not require it. Routine inspections will let you know about an infestation before it is extreme and ultimately spreads out of control.

Many University studies have shown that trained bed bug dogs are much more accurate than a trained technician. Combine this with the speed & reliability of our bed bug dogs and you can see the obvious benefits of the ourK9 teams.

Canine vs Human Bed Bugs Sask detectionservices are faster, more accurate and can also be more cost effective compared to technician inspections. WerecommendOn Demand Bed Bug Confirmations and Block Inspections Instead of having a technician respond to the first call to confirm if there are bed bugs.

Our K9s have been used in a variety of unique and creative ways. They have been used to detect bugs in taxi cabs, hotels, airplanes, trains, food courts, manufacturing plants and many other types of properties, both solely and as a part of a team program.

Unlike a human inspection, which can take several hours and require moving furniture, a bed bug sniffing canine can cover a typical room in less than three minutes. For canine bed bug detection nothing needs to be moved and there are no special preparation requirements.

Bed Bugs have made a dramatic come back in hotels, motels, hostels, office buildings, and homes. Bed Bugs are tan in colour until they feed on blood and then they turn a reddish colour; approximately 1/4 inch in size before feeding and will swell once they have fed. Generally, they will feed at night and go into hiding during the day, but have been known to feed at other times if the conditions are right. Female Bed Bugs can lay up to 300 eggs in her lifetime, each hatching in 10 days. Bed Bugs can hide in a variety of places: beds, mattresses, couches, libraries, school buses, kids back-packs, headboards, dressers, floor boards, fabric chairs, behind peeling paint, carpet, rugs, wallpaper, base boards, electrical outlets, switch plates, briefcases, suitcases and night tables.

Our dogs can target specific areas and often locate the sources of the infestation which eliminates the need to to treat unaffected areas unnecessarily. Less area treated translates into less money spent on treatment. If the K9 finds bed bugs, you can investigate your treatment options. With early detection there is a greater chance of eradicating the problem which can save you time, resources, energy and money.

If our dogs do not find bed bugs, you will know with greater certainty that your home/building/hotel/hospital etc. is bed bug free, offering peace of mind.

Canine vs Human Bed Bugs Sask

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Travelers are terrified by bed bugs — but can’t spot one in a lineup – AOL

You probably wouldn't know one if you saw one.

Bed bug, termite, or louse? Only 35 percent of business travelers (and a scant 28 percent of leisure travelers) could identify a bed bug from an insect lineup, despite the fact that nearly 60 percent of travelers said that if they found one, they wouldn't just switch roomsthey'd switch hotels.

American travelers may be unable to tell a tick from a bed bug, concludes a study published today in American Entomologist, but we sure know we hate them.

"Hotels are really second only to homes and apartments as to where bed bugs are likely to occur," says study author Michael Potter, an Entomologist at the University of Kentucky. "There's been a lot of news coverage about bed bug incidence in hotels, but there's never been a study to actually assess the attitude towards these pests by those who travel. The hotel and lodging industry is particularly vulnerable to occurrences because of the power of social media and the potential impact of these reports of bed bug bites online, and how people respond when they find or think they find a problem in a hotel room."

RELATED: TripAdvisor names the top 25 hotels in the world

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TripAdvisor names the top 25 hotels in the world - 2017

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10.JA Manafaru Haa Alif Atoll,Maldives

Photo: TripAdvisor

10.JA Manafaru Haa Alif Atoll,Maldives

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9.Tulemar Bungalows & Villas Province of Puntarenas,Costa Rica

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9.Tulemar Bungalows & Villas Province of Puntarenas,Costa Rica

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8.Hanoi La Siesta Hotel & SpaHanoi, Vietnam

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8.Hanoi La Siesta Hotel & SpaHanoi, Vietnam

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7.Shinta Mani ResortSiem Reap Province,Cambodia

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7.Shinta Mani ResortSiem Reap Province,Cambodia

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6.Portrait FirenzeFlorence, Italy

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6.Portrait FirenzeFlorence, Italy

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5.BoHo Prague HotelPrague, Czech Republic

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5.BoHo Prague HotelPrague, Czech Republic

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4.Hotel The SerrasBarcelona, Spain

Photo: TripAdvisor

4.Hotel The SerrasBarcelona, Spain

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3.Turin Palace HotelTurin, Italy

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3.Turin Palace HotelTurin, Italy

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2.Mandapa, A Ritz-Carlton Reserve Ubud,Indonesia

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2.Mandapa, A Ritz-Carlton Reserve Ubud,Indonesia

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1.Aria Hotel Budapest by Library Hotel CollectionBudapest, Hungary

Photo: TripAdvisor

1.Aria Hotel Budapest by Library Hotel CollectionBudapest, Hungary

Photo: TripAdvisor

1.Aria Hotel Budapest by Library Hotel CollectionBudapest, Hungary

Photo: TripAdvisor

1.Aria Hotel Budapest by Library Hotel CollectionBudapest, Hungary

Photo: TripAdvisor

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For almost a generation, bed bugs had become less fearsome and more fantastical. Many of us grew up saying the expression, "sleep tight, don't let the bed bugs bite," believing that bed bugs were as real as Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky. Unbeknownst to many of us, it was the crazy chemical days of the 1950s and 60s that had eliminated bed bugs as a credible threat. DDT might have nearly wiped out America's birds (and much of its wildlife) but it also temporarily took down the bed bug.

That changed towards the beginning of this century, as insecticide-resistant bed bugs began to reemerge. New pesticides don't work as well on them, because they target the same pathways in bed bugs as DDTand the insects have evolved to handle them. This, combined with the fact that they strike us in our beds while we sleep, makes them feel like the ultimate violation. The thought of a roach infestation may make you shudder, but most of us would take that horror show over an encounter with bed bugs any day.

Entomological Society of America

The problem, according to the study, is that the fear doesn't really match the problem. Sixty percent of business travelers and 51 percent of leisure travelers would be unwilling to stay in a hotel with a single online report of bed bugs; even, though as the study's bed bug identification report attests, those self-reports are likely to be inaccurate.

Our fear of bed bugs can be pretty costly for hotels, either because they're left treating rooms that don't actually have bed bugs, or because a bad review can leave them high and dry even if their bug problem is well contained. Here's the thing: one room with a bed bug does not an infested hotel make. And yet, a third of respondents said that if they actually found a bed bug in their room, they would refuse to stay at any hotel of that brand. It's almost as if they think bed bugs had loyalty cards.

While interviewing Potter, I recounted my own experience with bed bugs: I once stayed in a hotel where a colleague found bed bugs. They changed her room, comped it, sent her clothes out for cleaning, and even gave her an outfit to wear in the meantime. That seemed pretty reasonable to me, and I assumed that since her original room was on a different floor than mine, I was relatively safe.

Potter says that's a pretty safe assumption. Absent a significant infestation, a bed bug in one room doesn't mean that there's a bed bug in another roomespecially one in another part of the hotel. If you're in an adjoining room you might have a reason to be concerned, but if you're on a different floor or a different wing, not so much. Bed bugs can travel, yes, but they can't yet bend spacetime. And perhaps more importantly, he notes, the hotel responded correctly. "That's the response that we hope for," says Potter. They contained the problem and acted to fix it immediately. That kind of response should make you feel reasonably confident in an establishment's ability to stay (generally) free of bed bugs. You shouldn't knock a place for a few bed bug incidents.

"Bed bugs are pretty non-discriminatory," says Potter, "and they have nothing to do with filth."

Still, bed bugs are gross, and nobody enjoys the itchy welts that their bites can create. So, what is the bed bug skittish traveler to do?

"I do a cursory bed check," says Potter. "The most likely place you'll find bed bugs in a hotel room is behind the headboard, because the carbon dioxide and the heat tends to be where the bugs congregate initially. But those headboards can be difficult or impossible to get off of the wall."

Instead of ripping the headboard away, Potter checks the corner and the seams around the headboard area. "That's maybe the easiest place to check, but the highest chance of payoff," he says.

Then he'll pull back the sheets and check the upper and lower seams for bugs and fecal spots. Sure, there could still be bed bugs in a mattress that lack the classic signs. But these checks should reassure you. And there are steps you can take to limit the impact of any bed bugs you fail to spot.

"I don't leave my suitcase wide open with clothes strewn all around the bed," says Potter. "I tend to zip it up and put it on a credenza or a dresser surface. Just in case you've got issues, you're less likely to transport them home."

But, says Potter, there are limits to what he'll do to prevent taking bed bugs home. Some travelers actually store their suitcases (with clothes still packed inside them) in the bathtub for maximum safety. "Personally I think that's stupid," he says. "If you want to do it, fine. But I don't think it does that much good. And who wants to live out of a suitcase in a bathtub?"

More from Popular Science: Where in the United States is nature most likely to kill you? Bosch plans to use radar sensors in millions of cars to make better maps This adorable lil baby bird was perfectly preserved in amber for 99 million years

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Bed Bug Control – Indiana Pest Control

Since the mid-'90s, bed bug infestations have become increasingly common. Their growing resistance to insecticides makes them a particularly stubborn pest. Indiana Pest Control has the experience necessary to completely eradicate even the most persistent bed bug populations.

Bed bugs are parasitic insects, and they feed exclusively on the blood of their hosts. Humans, livestock, and pets are all suitable targets for a hungry bed bug. They eat mainly at night, punching their long beaks into the skin and withdrawing several drops of blood. While bed bugs generally do not transmit diseases, their bites are itchy and painful. They can also leave uncomfortable rashes on the skin of those with allergies.

The bite marks left by bed bugs are a good sign that your home is infested. However, reactions to these bites vary. Some people may not show visible symptoms of bed bug bites for several weeks. The best way to tell whether your home is infested is to look for the bed bugs themselves. Adult bed bugs are flat, brown, and oval shaped. After they feed, they swell up and become more red in color. Bed bugs often leave reddish excrement stains on bedding and walls, and these can also serve as early signs of an infestation.

Bed bugs are small and flat enough to enter the home through almost any crack or crevice. They often spread throughout houses and apartment complexes using ventilation systems. Bed bugs can also get into residences by hitching a ride on used furniture, clothing, and other infested items.

Bed bugs are difficult to get rid of without professional assistance. If your home is infested with bed bugs, call Indiana Pest Control for a free quote. We can get rid of these insects and their eggs for good. We servicing Layfayette and the surrounding area for more than 20 years.

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