I can’t emphasize it enough: heat treatment for bed bugs is not a do-it-yourself project. Not only is it dangerous, but it may not get rid of bed bugs, even if the DIY-er and the home survive intact.  (And that’s a big “if”!)

And now it’s happened again: someone attempting a DIY heat treatment sets their home on fire. In this case, it was a Gloucester County, NJ man employing a space heater, hair dryer and heat gun — how, I’m really not sure. (Note: Gloucester County, NJ is part of Greater Philadelphia.)

Conair Pro Style 1200 Blow Dryer

As The Philadelphia Inquirer reports,

A man trying to get rid of bedbugs from his Woodbury home accidentally set it on fire Tuesday, injuring himself and a firefighter.

Gloucester County spokeswoman Debra Sellitto said firefighters responded to the house on the unit block of Penn Street just before noon to find the second floor on fire.

The homeowner, a male who was not named, had apparently been trying to eradicate the bedbugs from his house using a home remedy that included a space heater, hair dryer, and heat gun to “heat” the bugs out, Sellitto said.

The man has unfortunately been hospitalized due to this failed bed bug treatment attempt. Philly.com reports that his home experienced a second fire five hours after the first, and firefighters aren’t yet certain what caused it, according to Philly.com.

Please do not attempt to heat treat your own home for bed bugs. It is just plain dangerous.  Even if heat treatment doesn’t result in a fire, it can make your bed bug problem harder to treat, as at least one Bedbugger Forums user found.

You may also be interested in our FAQ: Heat Treatment for Bed Bugs is not a Do-it-Yourself Project. It explains why this is not a good idea, and suggests some better alternatives if you must do your own bed bug treatment.

Image credit: Conair Pro Style 1200 Blow Dryer by twitchery on flickr, used under a Creative Commons Attribution license.

 

Update (6/14):  more on the story including footage of the burning house in this ABC News video:

(You can also view it on the ABC site.)

And, not much story here, but most original headline award goes to The Philly Post for

“Good Night! Sleep Tight! Don’t Let The Bedbugs Drive You To Commit Arson Against Yourself!”

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Faika Shabaan, an Annapolis, Maryland woman who lived with bed bugs in a rental unit for more than eight months, has been awarded $800,000 in compensatory damages for loss and suffering.

According to NBC News, the lawsuit argued that the landlord in this case knew about bed bugs in the unit when the lease was signed, but did not disclose the problem (the subject of an open housing code violation) to the tenant.

The Capital Gazette notes that Shabaan first suffered from what she later discovered to be bed bug bites from when she moved in in October through April, when someone finally suggested the skin lesions might be from bed bugs.

That led Shabaan to ask around in the building, according to The Capital Gazette:

Shaaban worried about her neighbors — a woman and baby who lived in the second apartment in the converted home.

The woman told Shaaban she’d reported the bedbug problem to Barrett for weeks and nothing had been done.

Shaaban next spoke to the superintendent on the site. The man, who also lived in the home, said he knew about the infestation, but was afraid he’d lose his job if he told the tenants. He said he got bitten every night, too.

Shaaban contacted city employees to complain. Records show Barrett was found in violation and ordered to hire a licensed, professional pest control contractor to eradicate pest in units A and B.

“He defies the order of the city,” Whitney said. “He decides to pick up some propane heaters and do it (himself), not knowing what he’s doing.”

City records confirm Barrett’s failed attempt.

Heat treatment is not a do it yourself project.

But the horror does not end there!

According to The Capital Gazette, in apparent retaliation for her reports to the city, the landlord then shut off Shabaan’s hot water and eventually her entire water supply, and finally evicted her while she was out — so that the tenant arrived home to find the remnants of her belongings on the curb– that is, the stuff which hasn’t already been stolen.

Wow.

It’s noteworthy that the amount awarded was twice what the plaintiff asked for.  And to put it in perspective, as The Baltimore Sun notes, it’s more than twice the $382,000 that the brother and sister plaintiffs received in the Mathias v. Accor judgment in 2002.  (In that famous case, a Chicago Motel 6 rented a unit it knew to be infested.)

As Shabaan’s lawyer Daniel Whitney told the Capital Gazette, “The jury was asked to send a message… I think they have.”

Articles about landlords being held responsible for bed bug treatment usually elicit a certain resistance among the commenters, so let me be clear: we are not anti-landlord.  Landlords and tenants should both have rights in a bed bug situation.

However, there is no way on earth that a landlord should be allowed to rent a unit which is known to have a bed bug problem which hasn’t been eliminated.  Landlords should not get away with not disclosing such a situation to a prospective tenant.

And if the law requires landlords to address bed bugs, they should not be allowed to ignore this.  We hear about these two situations more often than you’d think, and it really is despicable.

You can read more about bed bug lawsuits (and how to find a lawyer) in this FAQ.

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At the end of April, various sources reported that the New Rochelle, NY public library had closed for a day after bed bugs were found in the building.  The New Rochelle Daily Voice reported on May 1,

“Pest management experts were immediately called in after one insect was found.  This was not an infestation.  There was no adverse impact on patrons, staff or library materials,” a statement from the library said.

According to library officials, a trained dog investigated the library on April 28 and found some bed bug activity in one desk, in a piece of furniture and in a drawer in areas off-limits to patrons.  All three item were destroyed.

The Daily Voice also noted that one day later, “the pest management firm reported no evidence of bed bugs in the building.”

Such confident declarations are normally made in stories like this, where bed bugs are found and a single treatment is done in public places.  However, note that when homes are treated, unless structural heat or structural gas fumigation are used for treatment, it isn’t normally assumed that one treatment will be sufficient.

Bed bug treatments of the steam/spray/dust variety typically are repeated every two weeks until the problem is gone.  And since it’s rare to see a bed bug if there aren’t many present, and since bed bug bites aren’t a reliable indicator as to whether bed bugs are present, pest management professionals (PMPs) often use bed bug monitors to see if the problem persists.  (And if they don’t, consumers will probably want to do this for themselves — see our FAQ on various types of bed bug monitors.)

Today, Talk of the Sound reports one bed bug was found in a staff area of the New Rochelle Public Library this past Monday, that spraying was to have occurred this morning, and the library was to open at 10 am.

Were bed bugs brought in again?

Perhaps.  Or maybe they were there all the time.

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Remember the low income, elderly, and disabled tenants of Elsie Mason Manor and Ligutti Tower in Des Moines, Iowa, who said they lived with bed bugs without treatment for more than two years?

In fact, tenants claimed there was no bed bug treatment until they filed a lawsuit.

We first told you about their story back in 2010, when they filed a class action suit against their landlord. The tenants cited “unconscionable and substandard living conditions” and wanted the landlord to provide immediate treatment for residents, and to disclose the presence of bed bugs to prospective tenants.

And it was said the class (representing about 300 current and former tenants) would seek as much as $7.4 million, “in reimbursement for pain and suffering, rent overcharges and replacement of infested belongings.”

In 2011, the judge initially certified the class, a ruling which was later challenged. And now, according to the Des Moines Register, the class action will finally be headed to Polk County District Court for trial.

You may also be interested in our list of bed bug lawsuits.

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A Bay Area Starbucks recently had bed bugs — according to NBC Bay Area news — for over two months.

According to NBC Bay Area News, two women were getting ready to leave a Starbucks in Campbell, California (in Santa Clara County) when one noticed a bed bug on her purse, which had been sitting on the table. When she notified an employee about the problem, she claims he was “nonchalant.”

But things got worse later, at home, according to the news report:

The first woman said when she got home, she ended up with two bed bugs and woke up with six bites on her neck. Knowing what they were, she put them in bags and froze them, preparing to take them to the Santa Clara County Vector Control. She said after making a call to Starbucks’ public relations and a site manager, she was left feeling even less assured, especially after what she says was the manager’s surprising response.

“He seemed concerned but said well, he’s known for two months and that just horrified me,” she recalled. “I thought for two months people have been coming in there and sitting in those seats or anywhere in that location, and could be taking them home with them.”

Dennis Kalson, the acting director of the Santa Clara County Department of Environmental Health Department, confirmed that the bed bugs the first woman took to Vector Control from Starbucks turned out to be bed bugs.

“They hitchhiked on customers, regular customers, who used the soft chair,” said Kalson. “They must have reproduced because it looked like they had an infestation.”

Two months!

This was not one of those “single-bed bug-spotted” stories we often get from public places like clothing stores and  theaters– the pest control operators reported finding ten bed bugs on their second visit to treat the shop.

In addition to pest control treatment, Starbucks now has removed its upholstered sofas from this location and has declared the problem has been cleared.

Note where the reporter in the video seems to paraphrase Russ Parman, Acting Manager of Santa Clara Vector Control, as suggesting in regard to a plateau in bed bug reports in 2011 and 2012 (after two years in which the number of reports doubled) that bed bugs are now so common in houses, apartments and hotels that people no longer bother to report them to agencies.

And what about the women from the news story who claimed she took two bed bugs home from Starbucks?  I hope she has had her home professionally inspected and that she monitors for the presence of bed bugs going forward.  Bed bug bites are one thing, but a costly treatment process at home is quite another.

Finding both the bed bugs you accidentally brought home from a public place would seem like a stroke of very good luck.  Let’s hope that was the case!

Here’s the video:

(You can also view the video on the NBC Bay Area website.)

Your thoughts?  Please leave a comment below!

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Bed bug sex, bed bug sex, bed bug sex.  People just cannot stop talking about bed bug sex.

Occasionally, people write about bed bugs’ effect on human sex, for example, this article from GQ.

But mostly, people just want to talk about traumatic insemination.

How horrid  it is!  How inhuman!

And the latest source of bed bug sex education?  Nova.

(Here’s the video on the PBS/Nova site, with a transcript.)

I won’t begrudge people their fascination with the creepiest facts about bed bugs, but I am a bit troubled by the creative designs Nova placed on the bed bug models (or, shall we say, porn stars?)

I understand the intention is to have males and females easily distinguished by the viewer, but come on, Nova!

Aren’t you trying to educate people about science?

Obviously, you need some kind of marker added to a realistic bed bug image to help most viewers distinguish male and female, which isn’t always easy.

I’m just saying, there might be a more educational way to do it — one which maintains the look of bed bugs — rather than adding an artistic pattern to the entire surface of the bed bug.

These Nova male bed bugs look like gentlemen dressed for an outing.  And of course, they most certainly are not gentlemen!  That’s the point, isn’t it?

And bed bug education should be on everyone’s minds.  After all, we still have a lot of people out there who don’t know what bed bugs look like, and the educational effort isn’t always helped by popular media.

The Green Porno episode on bed bug sex remains, hands down, the weirdest bed bug-related item I’ve ever seen, hands down, just as it was back in 2010.  So much so that, of course, I must embed it here again.

(You can also view it on YouTube.)

Kudos to Smithsonian for drawing our attention back to this National Geographic video showing actual bed bugs mating (warning: graphic images — not for those in the throes of a bed bug infestation):

(You can also view it on YouTube.)

Note: If you are among those fascinated by traumatic insemination, then you may be interested in listening to the Breaking Bio podcasters talking with Bed Bug Sexpert Mike Siva-Jothy.

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The New Hampshire Union Leader reports that the New Hampshire Senate passed House Bill 482 Thursday, which “outlines the parameters for dealing with bed-bug infestations and the responsibilities of landlords and tenants to remediate the problem.”

You can read the full text of HB482 here.

According to The Union Leader,

The bill is a compromise among all the stakeholders, including tenants, landlords and municipalities. Proponents say the bill will allow a rapid response that clarifies the responsibilities for remedial action.

The bill grew out of the work of the Bed Bug Action Committee, bringing those affected by bed-bug infestations together to reach a compromise on the best methods to fight the problem.

The bill now goes to the governor.

House Bill 482 has a number of provisions, including the following requirements:

  • Tenants must allow landlords access to “Evaluate whether bedbugs are present after the landlord has received notice that bed bugs are present in a dwelling unit adjacent to the premises or a dwelling unit that is directly above or below the premises, provided the landlord gives the tenant 48 hours written notice of his or her need to enter the premises to evaluate whether bed bugs are present.”
  • Tenants must cooperate with any required preparations for treatment, “provided that such instructions are given to an adult member of the tenant household such that the tenant household has a reasonable opportunity to comply, and in all cases at least 72 hours prior to remediation.”
  • Landlords must investigate tenant complaints of bed bugs within 7 days.
  • Landlords must pay for treatment, “but may recover those costs if the tenant is responsible for the infestation.”  (If the tenant is deemed responsible, they have to pay the landlord or enter into a “reasonable payment agreement” within 30 days, or face eviction.)  The landlord bears the burden of proving the tenant was responsible.

Regarding this last provision, sections IV and V of the bill outline how they’re planning to determine responsibility; it appears that if there haven’t been other complaints from tenants and if the infested unit and adjacent units haven’t previously been treated, the original tenant will be considered “responsible” as the one who “brought bed bugs into the building.”

That’s a bit troubling, because the problem is, where there’s a concern that one might be held financially responsible (and be unable to pay), some tenants simply won’t report the problem.

Of course, the bill is smart in the sense it sets up a situation where –assuming that happens, and bed bugs spread into other units — the original tenant can be held responsible as the true “source.”

That is, assuming other tenants who get bed bugs later aren’t also too afraid to come forward.  And even if they do, that leaves the landlord presumably responsible for paying for treatment for all of these folks, all because the original (“responsible”) tenant did not come forward.

You see the problem?

It is, of course, a compromise between the various parties involved and I completely understand the point of this provision is to avoid the landlord taking on the burden of treating for bed bugs in all cases.  That’s an admirable aim.  We’ve all heard stories of the tenant who has a persistent guest with bed bugs, or the tenant who will not stop bringing in trash-picked furniture, for example.

However, the argument in favor of landlords paying for treatment in all cases, is that some tenants just won’t report the problem if they fear they will have to pay or be evicted, which for many will be the case.

And when that happens,  landlords will suffer financially, and other tenants will suffer (bed bug bites, costs of prep for treatment in time and money), if problems spread due to such a scenario.

The bill seems to mandate that landlords offer tenants deemed responsible a “reasonable repayment agreement,” and this part seems quite fair and well thought-out.  It’s just that bed bug treatment is very expensive and experience from reading what people write on our Bedbugger Forums suggests lots of people (especially those on limited incomes) will do anything to avoid coming forward and being held responsible.

And it also seems like that could lead to tenants being held responsible even if they weren’t the only ones who had had bed bugs, but just the only ones who’d reported them.

What about the group whose work the Union Leader suggested was the impetus for this bill?

According to the NH Bed Bugs website,

The Bed Bug Action Committee (BBAC) is a group of community organizers, college and university staff and students, non-profit leaders, local business owners, teachers, health workers, local officials, church members, and volunteers, all committed to successfully addressing the problem of bed bugs in NH.

We told you about the Manchester, NH Bed Bug Action Committee back in June 2009, soon after it formed to address the conditions in a highly infested building (Manchester’s Langdon Mill Apartments).  Read our original story here and the follow-up from September of the same year.

More soon on bed bug bills pending in Connecticut.

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The European Parliament moves its sessions regularly between Brussels and Strasbourg, taking Members of the European Parliament back and forth between the cities.

European Flag

According to the Liberal Democrat Voice, British MEP Chris Davies has recently complained about suspected bed bug bites:

“I went to the medical centre in the European Parliament in Brussels. ‘I’ve had these itchy spots on my arms and legs for 6 weeks or so,’ I told the doctor. ‘They started off like insect bites but they won’t go away.’ She looked at them and asked if any new spots had appeared since the Parliament was last in Strasbourg. I told her no.

“‘The good news is that they are entirely harmless and non-contagious and will go away,’ she said. ‘The bad news is that they are bed bug bites. Strasbourg is notorious for bed bugs; we get 8 cases a week here. If it’s any consolation they are bed-specific. Like everyone else in the Parliament you will have booked the same hotel 12 months in advance but so long as you don’t get the same room you may be ok.’”

Just don’t stay in the same room?  That’s all you’ve got?

There’s a lot of misinformation embedded in this one story.

It does sound like the skin reactions might well be bed bug bites, but remember: doctors can’t diagnose bed bugs from skin reactions.  Not by sight and not even if they take a skin scraping.  We understand a skin scraping may lead to a diagnosis of an “insect bite,” but you can’t confirm bed bugs without visual signs of bed bugs (bed bugs, cast skins, fecal stains, eggs — see our photos of bed bugs and their signs).

Next, while it’s true they aren’t contagious in the sense of scabies or the flu, bed bugs can spread.  Just like everyone else, the traveling MEPs are at real risk not just of exposure but also at risk of bringing bed bugs to their next locations — including their homes.

Bed bugs may be “bed specific” in the sense that a hotel might have some rooms with bed bugs, and some rooms without, but it is also true that they don’t just live in beds but can spread further, or even start out in other areas.  And they can and do hitchhike to new locations and set up new infestations there.

Of course, there’s no reason to panic.  Many people are exposed to bed bugs repeatedly through travel or work without bringing any home.  However, it’s worth taking some precautions.

I strongly suggest that anyone traveling learns to carefully inspect a room for bed bugs (this FAQ should help).  It’s worth taking the time for such inspections at the start of any stay in a new place, and taking some simple precautions against bringing them home (again, per our FAQ), in case there is an undetected exposure.

Regular travelers and others at higher risk might consider installing some kind of bed bug monitoring system (see our FAQ on detection for more about bed bug monitors).  That means if bed bugs are brought home, they may be detected quickly so action can be taken.

When this blog started back in 2006, almost every media report about bed bugs contained inaccuracies. These days, good information has spread, but there is still a lot of misinformation out there.   I wish doctors (and the media) would pay more attention to factual information about bed bugs which is widely available these days.

You may wish to view our Travel FAQs.

Photo credit:  “European Flag” by Rock Cohen used under a Creative Commons Attribution License.

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Old Balkan remedy for bed bugs leads to new trapping technologies

April 10, 2013

  Bedbug on bean leaf (left); bedbug leg trapped by tiny, hairlike trichomes on leaf surface (right) Image credit: M. Szyndler and C. Loudon / UC Irvine Researchers have investigated an old Balkan folk remedy for bed bugs, finding that kidney bean leaves can impale and trap bed bugs.  The scientists, Catherine Loudon, Robert Corn, and Megan [...]

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18 comments Read the full article →

Bed bugs and bullets: Boston pest controller turns up guns and ammo stash in bed bug search

April 7, 2013

The Boston Globe reports that a Boston pest control operator recently uncovered an illegal guns and ammunition stash under someone’s bed, while searching for bed bugs in a South End public housing development: A pest-control worker found two guns Saturday morning while checking for bedbugs under a mattress in a unit in the Cathedral development [...]

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Virginia high school fighting bed bugs bans hoodies

March 11, 2013

Churchland High School in Portsmouth, Virginia has now banned hoodies because of fear that students wearing them will transport hitchhiking bed bugs, Coastal Virginia’s WAVY.com reports. Yes, bed bugs can and do hitchhike on clothing and possessions, but there’s nothing magical about hoodies that makes them ideal bed bug carriers. And there’s no reason to [...]

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“Bedbugs” vs. “Bed Bugs,” and brother vs. brother

March 3, 2013

Alex Wild’s Myrmecos blog has a new post engaging with the age-old question: Is “Bedbugs” one word or two? and finds that internet searchers and printed matter — books, at least — don’t agree: According to Google’s ngram viewer, a measure of word frequency in scanned books, ‘bedbugs’ as a single word is used far more frequently…. [...]

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13 comments Read the full article →