Monthly Archives: June 2017

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Top ten tips to stop or prevent bed bugs – KPCNews: Kpcnews – KPCnews.com

The last two weeks I have had two separate calls on problems with bed bugs. While bed bugs may sound like a death threat if you have them, they can be controlled with the correct measures. These little insects are found worldwide in all living situations. The following article was provided by the Environmental Protection Agency:

1. Make sure you really have bed bugs, not fleas, ticks or other insects.

You can compare your insect to the pictures on our Identifying bed bugs web page or show it to your local Extension agent. (Extension agents are trained in pest control issues and know your local area.)

2. Dont panic!

It can be difficult to eliminate bed bugs, but its not impossible. Dont throw out all of your things, because most of them can be treated and saved. Throwing stuff out is expensive, may spread the bed bugs to other peoples homes and could cause more stress.

3. Think through your treatment options Dont immediately reach for the spray can.

Be comprehensive in your approach. Try other things first. Integrated pest management (IPM) techniques may reduce the number of bed bugs and limit your contact with pesticides. If pesticides are needed, always follow label directions or hire a professional. There is help available to learn about treatment options.

4. Reduce the number of hiding places clean up the clutter.

A cluttered home provides more places for bed bugs to hide and makes locating and treating them harder. If bed bugs are in your mattress, using special bed bug covers (encasements) on your mattress and box springs makes it harder for bed bugs to get to you while you sleep. Leave the encasements on for a year. Be sure to buy a product that has been tested for bed bugs and is strong enough to last for the full year without tearing.

5. Regularly wash and heat-dry your bed sheets, blankets, bedspreads and any clothing that touches the floor.

This reduces the number of bed bugs. Bed bugs and their eggs can hide in laundry containers/hampers Remember to clean them when you do the laundry.

6. Do-it-yourself freezing may not be a reliable method for bed bug control.

While freezing can kill bed bugs, temperatures must remain very low for a long time. Home freezers may not be cold enough to kill bed bugs; always use a thermometer to accurately check the temperature. Putting things outside in freezing temperatures could kill bed bugs, but there are many factors that can affect the success of this method.

7. Kill bed bugs with heat, but be very careful.

Raising the indoor temperature with the thermostat or space heaters wont do the job. Special equipment and very high temperatures are necessary for successful heat treatment. Black plastic bags in the sun might work to kill bed bugs in luggage or small items, if the contents become hot enough. Bed bugs die when their body temperatures reach 45C (113F). To kill bed bugs with heat, the room or container must be even hotter to ensure sustained heat reaches the bugs no matter where they are hiding

8. Dont pass your bed bugs on to others.

Bed bugs are good hitchhikers. If you throw out a mattress or furniture that has bed bugs in it, you should slash or in some way destroy it so that no one else takes it and gets bed bugs.

9. Reduce the number of bed bugs to reduce bites.

Thorough vacuuming can get rid of some of your bed bugs. Carefully vacuum rugs, floors, upholstered furniture, bed frames, under beds, around bed legs, and all cracks and crevices around the room. Change the bag after each use so the bed bugs cant escape. Place the used bag in a tightly sealed plastic bag and in an outside garbage bin.

10. Turn to the professionals, if needed.

Hiring an experienced, responsible pest control professional can increase your chance of success in getting rid of bed bugs. If you hire an expert, be sure its a company with a good reputation and request that it use an IPM approach. Contact your state pesticide agency for guidance about hiring professional pest control companies. Also, EPAs Citizens Guide to Pest Control and Pesticide Safety provides information about IPM approaches, how to choose a pest control company, safe handling of pesticides, and emergency information.

If you would like more information, you can visit the EPA website at https://www.epa.gov/bedbugs.

Elysia RODGERS is the

agriculture and natural resources director for the Purdue University Cooperative ExtensionService in DeKalb County.

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Home | Let’s fight bedbugs

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Bedbugs can be found in all types of homesfrom luxurious or modest ones to clean and unsanitary ones. You shouldnt be ashamed. What's important is to act quickly in order to get rid of them.

Tenants must not try to resolve the problem themselves. They must immediately notify the owner (the superintendant or manager) of the building where they are living, as soon as they notice bedbugs in their home.

Once notified by a tenant, the building owner must call upon a qualified exterminator to detect the presence of bedbugs.

Tenants must get ready for the exterminator's visit by de-cluttering all the rooms of their home in order to make it easier for the exterminator to carry out his work and thereby limit the bedbugs' hiding places.

Avoid unpleasant surprises when coming back from a trip!

Bedbugs are insects that are visible to the naked eye. They are the size of an apple seed, have no wings and can be identified by their brown colour. They are generally found along the seams of mattresses, where they leave their droppings (excrement) and brownish stains. Bedbugs are active mainly at night and feed on human blood.

Bedbug bites cause itchiness that can result in insomnia, fatigue and anxiety. People battling bedbugs may feel ashamed and isolate themselves from others.

Yes. Bedbugs measure 3-7 mm and are the size and shape of an apple seed. They are reddish brown in colour. You can see them under the sheets of your bed as well as along the seams and edges of mattresses.

Itchiness and insect bites on your skin, as well as black stains on mattress seams and blood on sheets and pillow cases, may be signs that there are bedbugs in your bed. Bedbug bites look like mosquito bites. They cause itchiness that can disrupt sleep. In general, three to four bites will be found on the skin in a straight line or grouped together in the same spot. The exposed parts of arms, legs and the back are the most likely places to get bitten.

First, try and detect their presence. By lifting up sheets at night, you will be able to see little insects the size of an apple seed. You can also see traces of excrement and blood on the edges and seams of mattresses. If these detection efforts prove positive, act quickly, because the problem can rapidly get worse.

If you are a tenant in a residential building, you must report the presence of bedbugs as fast as possible to the building owner or manager of the building. The building owner must call upon an exterminator to check for the presence of these insect pests and destroy them.

Tenants must notify their building owner by registered mail, giving notification of the presence of bedbugs and demanding that the building owner take the necessary remedial action within 10 working days. This notice must mention that if the building owner fails to take the appropriate steps, a copy of the letter will be sent to the Division des permis et des inspections of the borough concerned.

To notify the Division des permis et des inspections in their borough, tenants must phone 311. According to the current procedure, they must then fax a copy of the letter or bring it to the point of service in their borough.

Let's Fight Bedbugs

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Everything You Need to Know About Bedbugs and Travel

Let's get one thing straight: bedbugs are simply not the scourge most people think they are for budget travelers and backpackers. Bed bugs don't transmit disease and hostels don't harbor them any more than hotels do (and outbreaks in either place are very rare). You're far more likely to get bed bugs in a hotel in New York City than you are on a backpacking trip to Southeast Asia.

In this article, I'm going to lay some myths to rest whilehelping you learn how to identify bed bugs, showing you which signs you should look out for in your accommodation, cover how you can effectivelytreat bed bug bites, help you toavoid bedbugs as you travel, and sharehow to kill them if they decide to travel with you (they're frustratingly tricky to get rid of).

I'll start with the myth-busting first.

Let's start first by saying that hostels have no more bed bug incidents than do other accommodation options. Greg Baumann, vice president of technical services at National Pest Management Association says,"There are no data to support that hostels have a higher incidence of bed bugs (than hotels)." Nonetheless, some people will always fear hostels are bed bug hotbeds. If you're one of those people, I can highly recommend traveling with a silk sleeping liner for peace of mind.

In the early 2000s, bed bugs became a hot travel topic when they started turning up in some luxury hotels. They had virtually disappeared from the U.S. lodging scene until a 1972 DDT insecticide ban; the spray once used on cockroaches and other pests turned out to have been an effective way to kill bed bugs, too. After DDT was banned, the number of bed bugs drastically increased.

In Europe, the bugs never really left.

Canada's Pest Control writes of bed bug hotel infestations: "The stigma attached to these parasites is influencing some hotels and other accommodations to ignore infestations or treat them without professional help. Lack of professional treatment comes with great risks, notably the possibility of litigation." Reading between the lines, we can deduce that there's no way in Hades some hotels will agree that those red bumps on your body are bed bug evidence -- and a U.S. desk clerk may not even know what bed bug bites really look like, anyway.

The lesson here is to do your research beforehand -- that's what this article is for!

Hostels, on the other hand, have long acknowledged the bugs' presence in the lodging world, especially outside the United States, and many take steps accordingly. Some actively tell you what to look for, and some hostels don't allow sleeping bags in hostel dorms, partly because yours can carry bed bugs (they like traveling as much as you do). Bed bugs also hitchhike on backpacks, which should tell you how easily they can be spread. If you manage to get bed bugs and don't realise for a week, you could have transported them to three different hostels and into twenty backpackers' bags, who have then each travelled to three other hostels.

Many people assume the bugs come with the territory of filthy hostels (another myth -- that all hostels are filthy by nature). Bed bugs don't care about a clean environment, though.

Where some truth may lie in the hostels-always-have-bedbugs myth is that the sheer density of people possible in one hostel dorm room(I've come across dorm rooms that sleep 100people at once!) can create a higher possibility of the bugs' appearance than in a hotel room used by a couple of travelers at a time.

If twelve backpackers are sleeping in one room, twelve chances are created for bugs to hop off one backpacker's stuff and onto yours, or into the hostel dorm furniture.

Again, though, there is no evidence to support the idea that hostels are more prone to infestation than other lodgings; in fact, given the higher likelihood of infestation and bed bug transference in a hostel because of sheer traveler numbers, it's remarkable that that likelihood does not translate into an actual higher infestation incidence in hostels than hotels.

I've been traveling the world full-time for over sixyears now, have stayed in literally hundreds of hostels, and have only been bitten by bedbugs once. It's a very rare occurrence.

And when I did get bitten? I told the hostel and they threw out all of their bunkbeds and bedding, and completely replaced them in order to make sure they were truly gone.

That's a far better response than refusing they didn't exist in the first place.

Do bedbugs carry disease? Well, bedbugs do carry 24 known pathogens, but do bedbugstransmit disease? Nope,bed bug biteswon't make you sick (unless, of course, the bites get infected). And while bedbugs do feed on blood, they don't spread AIDS or other blood-borne illnesses. In other words, if you're bitten by bed bugs, the only things you need to worry about are not scratching the bites until they bleed and finding a way to control the itching.

Mosquitos, on the other hand, can carry plenty of nasty diseases,likemalaria, dengue,and West Niledisease, which they transmit to you via a science fiction-like needle nose. If you're going to worry about one type of critter while you're traveling, make it mosquitoes.

That's not to say bedbugs and bed bug bites aren't a pain to deal with. They definitely are.

Bedbugs are gross, no doubt about it. Thinking about creatures crawling around in your bed and drinking your blood is a real shudder inducer. That actually happens all the time, though -- the creatures looking for your blood, that is (think mosquitoes). It might be the fact that bedbugs kindascuttlethat make them seem especially awful, and bed bugs are nocturnal -- creatures that scuttle at night just seem particularly sneaky, despite having microscopic brains and no personality characteristics to speak of.

The presence of bedbugs in a hostel or hotel don't mean the placeis unsanitary, though. Cockroaches, ants, flies -- yeah, they all love old food. Bedbugs likefreshfood. A dirty hostel does not attract bedbugs simply by virtue of its grime -- that's not how these travelers pick their new destinations.

The bedbugs hitchhike into hostels, hotels and, eventually, your own house, by way of your stuff -- your clothes, your sleeping bag or your backpack. They grab a ride out the same way.

As Baumann says of unsanitary conditions, "Bedbugs don't really care about that, and can be in the fanciest of hotels all the way to the other end of the spectrum." He goes on to say that while the whole bedbug infestation, cleanliness-impaired hotel equation is popular, there is no data to support it.

The single connection that could be possibly be made between the bugs and unsanitary habits would be that abedbug killing recommendationis washing possessions in very hot water. Perhaps that's how the myth started -- but no one, anywhere, ever washes their curtains in boiling water every day in order to keep a clean house. (Do they?)

Now that we've covered the myths, let's get stuck into what to look out for.

A bed bug bite looks like a small welt, and it burns and/or itches like crazy. And I mean, itchy.I've never experienced anything like it!

You can't feel a bed bug bite while it happens (they take about five minutes to feed), and the bugs are nocturnal. You'll typically wake in the morning feeling strangely itchy and look down to discover you're covered in red bites.

One distinguishing feature of bed bugs bites is that they often appear in a row of three. People will joke that when they bite you, they go for breakfast, lunch, and dinner while they're there! When I was bitten, the vast majority of mine were in groups of three, but some were spread out and others were in clusters, so don't assume it's something else if your bites aren't all in lines of three.

If you're wondering if yours is a bed bug bite, a quick search on Google Imageswill bring up some examples you can compare yours to.

You should wash a bed bug bite with soap and water, apply some ice, and use an antihistamine cream or no-itch cream. (Do check out Brave Soldier antisepticcream. It's the best no-itch, no infection, no-scar wound treatment around. Read aBrave Soldier reviewand then consider letting Brave Soldier guard your borders -- I always carry a tube in my travelfirst aid kit.)

The most important thing here is not. to. scratch. These bites areitchy and the more you scratch them, the more likely it is that they'll become and open wound and get infected.

If a bed bug bite gets infected while you're traveling (gets very tender, feels hot, and starts oozing yellow, white or greenish goo), you should consider seeing a doctor. I've seen doctors abroad when I'm sick -- it's been easier and less expensive for me than seeing U.S. doctors, and I got well every time. If you're not able to see a doctor and are traveling with antibiotics, consider taking a course if you're 100% convinced it's an infection.

Bedbugs are teeny flat critters; grown adults are about the size of an apple seed. Adults are brown until they consume some blood, after which they turn reddish brown. Ah, that rosy after-dinner glow.

Pinhead-sized nymphs, or non-adults, are smaller and are whitish or gold until they feed -- just about the color of a mattress, making them very tough to see. (More evidence of clever, sneaky behavior.)

Bed bugs like beds, of course, though "bed bug" is actually a misnomer, since they certainly live anywhere. However, they're especially likely to like your bed -- you, who are their meal ticket, are in bed all night, which is when they come out to eat.

According to the National Pest Management Organization, the bugs can also live in carpets, under wallpaper, behind baseboards, and in small cracks and crevices throughout a room. Baumann comments that the bugs can be found in all furniture, pointing out that someone carrying them in clothing can spend as much time on couches and chairs in the living room as in bed.

The bugs can travel alone, but seeing one is probably the tip of the iceberg. The nocturnal animals are transient and elusive. They can hide in the seams of mattresses or in the heads of screws, which makes them particularly tricky to track down. I've even heard of bedbugs crawling up onto the ceiling and falling down onto a bed to feed at night.

They're so frightening because they're so hard to find.

The odor of an bed bug infestation, though distinct, is too subtle for amateur bug detectives. Bed bugs are said to smell like sweet, rotten raspberries, and it's also said that an infested room smells like almonds; I can't summon up that particular odor mix, but perhaps you'll catch the smell of an old granola bar if you flatten a scuttler and know that, yep, it was a bed bug. Most likely, you'll need a biginfestation before you can smell the bugs in a room's air.

Bed bugs do leave tiny reddish or black streaks on sheets. If you see those upon checking into a hostel orhotel room, consider grabbing your stuff before crawling hitchhikers hop on it, and cruising straight back to the desk to ask for a new room.If need be, just go to adifferent hostel or hotel-- cheaper than getting rid of the pesky travelers if they hitch a ride with you, and far better than being bitten all night. The staff should offer you a refund, of course.

These bugs are great world travelers. They like living in yoursleeping bag, backpack, and clothes until they can get to your house and move into the recliner, where they can start raising a big family in a nice neighborhood. A female can lay up to 500 eggs over its lifetime. Take a look in the seams of your backpack or along the zipper to spot them in a likely destination. And if you suspect you might have an infestation, do not take your backpack into your home. You'll likely have to spend thousands of dollars to get rid of them if that happens.

Let's look at some of the bugs' habits before learning about how to kill bed bugs.

The bedbugs hitch rides in baggage, sleep sacks, or sleeping bags. They jump from hotel to hostel to home on humans -- someone brought 'em to your lodging, albeit accidentally. And they all want to be exchange bugs and travel to new homes internationally.

You'll likely noticebitesbefore, andif you see the biters themselves, unless you see thetelltale streakson your sheets; the bugs are nocturnal and they hide out unless feeding.

And they're tough customers. They can live more than a year without eating; taking a vacation in hopes the bugs will then move out won't work. They can take the temperatures, too; the bugs are okay with boiling to Fahrenheit 113, and freezing will rarely kill them either.

If you've gotbites, or you know you've spent time in a room harboring the bugs, vacuum your suitcases, backpack, camera bag -- leave no seam unsucked. Wash everything you own in the hottest water possible to boil the little biters. When I got bed bugs, I asked the hotel I was staying at if they would be able to wash my backpack and everything in it in their large laundry machines, then used the hair dryer on everything I owned afterwardsto be sure they were gone. I even used the hair dryer on every page of my diary!

The same rules on how to kill bed bugs while traveling apply at home: vacuum your living space relentlessly, including furniture, changing the bag outside (small bed bugscan wiggle through a stitch hole). Wash or dry clean everything moveable (clothes, bedspreads, throw rugs) in hottest water. If one happy couple escapes, though, it's all for nothing.

Baumann points out that people pay plenty trying various home remedies that don't go so well, and recommends that you bite the bullet and foot the bill for an exterminator to begin with. It's easiest, fastest, and most likely cheapest in the long run.

The exterminator will have instructions regarding jobs you should complete prior to his arrival. They'll be things likedon't open travel bags on home furniture, like beds, and store them away from furniture (like in an outside shed), so any bugs who've hitchhiked may not get the chance to move in.

You may have to also:

You may also want to:

The bugs now live in all 50 states -- you can certainly get them at home without having traveled, too. Craft says Orkin has exterminated the bloody beasts in all states but North and South Dakota.

Once the mass slaughter is over and you're bug free, don't let the bugs bite again by keeping an eye out for the little pests next time you travel, and use the tips above to keep them out of the house when you get home.

This article has been edited and updated by Lauren Juliff.

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Everything You Need to Know About Bedbugs and Travel

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BuzzFeed Has Bedbugs – New York Magazine

Ad will collapse in seconds CLOSE June 22, 2017 06/22/2017 12:34 pm By Adam K. Raymond Share BUG.

OMG. EWW. WTF. BuzzFeed has bedbugs. Carole Robinson, chief communications officer for the company, sent an email to employees Thursday telling them to work from home because of the infestation at their Gramercy Park headquarters. Poynter has published that email.

Please be advised that bed bugs have been detected at BuzzFeed HQ at 111 East 18th Street. We are acting out of an abundance of caution and asking you to work from home tomorrow to give facilities the chance to deal with this in the fastest and environmentally safest manner. Fumigation will take place as soon as possible tomorrow.

The email goes on to tell employees that they can swing by until 11 a.m. to snag their laptops, but advising them against taking home items that are currently on the floor in the office.

The incident at BuzzFeed HQ is only the latest recent insect attack on a new-media property. Last week, bees swarmed the Vox Media offices in the Financial District.

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Were about to find out what Mattiss Pentagon will do with mostly unchecked authority to conduct a war.

Should Democrats in places like Georgia keep trying to rebuild white support? Or should they focus on minority mobilization? The debate goes on.

A new report suggests Obama knew about Putins intervention in the 2016 election and its aims, but didnt move aggressively until it was too late.

The emergence of a new game plan, from persuasion to motivation.

Look, I dont know who you are, wiseass, Biden reportedly said.

Oops!

One surprised music critic reviews Mystified.

The Justice Departments handling of the Clinton email investigation is at the center of the senators questions.

Dean Heller of Nevada said he could not support legislation as written. Now things get dicey for Mitch McConnell.

Turns out, the former FBI director was attending an event for a nonprofit that works with abused children.

D.C. might still be revolving around legislative gridlock and investigations. But the electoral landscape would be very different.

A U.S. representative said he couldnt back the resolution which condemned violence against women because it supported safe abortion.

Obamacares popularity seems to be peaking just as Republicans get closer to taking it down in legislation that is not popular at all.

The Saudi-led coalition wants the tiny Gulf state to cut off ties with Iran and close Al Jazeera, ultimatums Qatar isnt likely to meet.

Change is slow. Thats why we have to keep working.

She met with a handful of Republican senators this week, but they couldnt agree on a plan.

Unfortunately, this will have to be a Republicans-only exercise.

The president also admitted that his tape bluff was an attempt to intimidate Comeys testimony.

A quick break from the off-camera briefings.

Inclusion of this House deal in the Senate bill shows McConnell playing the long game. But it could encourage shakedowns by fence-sitting senators.

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Bed Bugs Are Back: What You Need To Know – WFMY News 2

WFMY 1:45 PM. EDT June 22, 2017

Experts say bed bugs can actually sneak in to your phone or your laptop when you're asleep! (Photo: Stephen Dalton, NHPA, Custom)

They're small, blood-sucking parasites perhaps living in the corners and crevices of our beds, feeding off us while we sleep.

Bed bugs, for decades, existed as myths,part of a rhyme our parents told us beforebed. Nowthey've made anunwelcomereturn and thosewho know the buggers best say it's high time we starttaking them seriously.

After all, getting a bed bug infestation "is a bit of a crap shoot," concededUniversity of Kentucky entomologist Michael Potter, meaning all of us are at risk.

Bed bugs used to be "incredibly common" in the early 20th century, Potter said. Back then, peopleroutinely checked for them and carried insecticide while traveling.

But the introduction ofpotent insecticides killed most of our bed bugs, banishing them from our homes and consciousnesses. The bugs,Potter said, disappeared from about the mid-1950s to the late 1990s. They became so rare people could no longer identify them and a new generation of pest control professionals weren't equipped to fight them, noted University of Florida research scientistRoberto Pereira.

But then they came "roaring back in the last five to seven years," Potter said, creeping into our couches, our apartments and eveninto the hotel rooms of our NBA stars. The reason why is a mystery, although Pereira and Potter suggest it's because the once potent insecticide is now banned, people travel more and the bugshave grown resistantto modern insecticides.

Now we're left avoiding them. But there are ways. Here's what you need to know:

If you've never seen one, bed bugs are small, flat, reddish-brown bugs about the size of Abraham Lincoln's head on a penny.

They have an oblong shell and a tiny head. They typically live in areas where people sleep because at night they feed on our blood.

Unlike ticks or fleas, bed bugs don't latch on when they feed. They bite then scurry away to digest. "It's a creepy parasite," described Potter. "It's a little bit like Dracula."

Bed bugs have to feed on human blood about once a week, Potter said. However, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention claims they can live several months without a "blood meal."

Potter said bed bugs will adapt to your schedule. For instance, if you work the overnight shift, they'll learn to feed on you during the day.

Bed bugs don't form colonies or nest, but they do aggregate, usually within about eight feet of where a person sleeps.

It's popular to find clusters of them on beds and recliners. Very skittish, bed bugs don't like movement, which is why they feed on us while we sleep.

Popular places for them to congregate are in the seams of mattresses, in bed frames, headboards, dressers andbehind wallpaper or clutter. A bed bug, notes the CDC, can travel more than 100 feet in a single night.

Bed bug bites look like raised welts and can cause serious allergic reactions in some people.

But a third of people don't experience any reaction. This only helps the infestation spread because people don't know they have the bugs.

The stigma that a filthy home is more at risk of getting bed bugs just isn't true, Potter claims.

Unlike cockroaches, rats or flies, who feed on filth, bed bugs feed on blood. They only need a body. Bed bugs, the CDC said, have been found in five-star hotels and resorts.

Bed bugs are mostoften foundin major metropolitan areas. However, over time, the pests have found their way to rural areas.

Anywhere there are close quarters, Potter said, the odds are better. It's a numbers game, he said, because the more people coming and going from a building increases the odds the bugs will find their way there.

Low-income housing also is a target because many people use old bedding and building staff may not take the steps to address the problem.

They don't carry disease

Bed bugs do not carry disease. At most, they're annoyances which cause itching and a lack of sleep.

Experts say people bring an infestation into a home after they've gone to a place with bed bugs and somehow brought them back to their house.

This can happen just about anywhere: At hotels, while ridingbusses and trains, vacationing on cruise ships and bunking in dorm rooms. They attach to stuff, Potter said, not people. He's seen them on the bottoms of shoes, baseball caps and even Beanie Babies.

But it's unlikely you'll get them from places where people don't sleep. The places where peopleget some shut-eye are most at risk.

Potter advises people check aroundhotel beds whenfirst checking in. Pull back the sheets, check the seam and corners of the mattress near the pillows and the headboard. Look for black spots, the bugs themselves or yellowish skins that bed bugs shed.

Try not to spread out in your hotel room. Don't place your open suitcaseagainst a wall. Try to keep it closed and set it on a hard surface. Don't spread clothes across the hotel room.

Potter said each of us needs to strike a balance as to how paranoid we'll be in avoiding bed bugs.

"You got to be careful because you take all the joy out life," he said. "People just have to decide how apprehensive do they want to be."

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