The United
States is currently experiencing a nightmarish epidemic of disgusting
blood sucking parasites, and no, I am not talking about our politicians.
There is a full blown bed bug epidemic happening all across America
and it just seems to get worse with each passing year. For cities
such as New York and Philadelphia which are at the epicenter of
the outbreak, bed bugs have become an important political issue.
Once bed bugs become entrenched in an area, virtually everyone is
thinking about them. Bed bugs will not kill you, but they can
drive you insane. Anyone that has ever had big, red welts all over
their bodies from bed bug bites knows how terribly frustrating bed
bugs can be. They can be incredibly difficult to get rid of. So
why am I talking about bed bugs when there are hundreds of other
important economic issues to talk about right now? Well, this is
just another example of how our country seems to be cursed. Even
the simplest things seem to become major problems for us these days.
The reality is that there were almost no bed bugs inside the U.S.
between the end of World War II and the 1990s. But today the number
of bed bugs is absolutely exploding. I remember when I was young
my mother would tell me to "sleep tight and don't let the bed bugs
bite", but I didn't even know what bed bugs were because I had never
seen any. But today, CBS News says that more
than 250 million dollars a year (and rising) is spent fighting
bed bugs.
Things have
gotten so bad that a "National
Bed Bug Summit" was held earlier this year in Washington D.C.
Will we soon
have a "war on bed bugs"?
I can just
see it now: "You are either with us or you are with the bed bugs".
So exactly
what are bed bugs?
Well, basically
bed bugs are small, brown, flat insects that love to suck the blood
of animals and humans. They are commonly found in hospitals, businesses,
homes, sofas, mattresses, buses, subways, trains, airplanes, classrooms,
retail stores, movie theaters and especially in hotels.
As mentioned
above, you will not die from bed bug bites. But many people have
been driven absolutely crazy from constant bed bug bites for weeks
or months on end.
One of the
worst things about a bed bug infestation is all of the itching that
bed bug bites cause. It can get to a point where it can be absolutely
debilitating.
Some people
become so traumatized by the fear of having bed bugs crawl all over
them and bite them all night that they actually become afraid to
go to sleep. A really bad bed bug infestation can cause panic attacks
and even depression.
Right now there
are large numbers of New Yorkers that are absolutely obsessed with
bed bugs. The bed bug infestation in the city just seems to get
worse and worse. The following is a quote from
a local NBC news station in New York....
New statistics
from the city's Department of Housing, Preservation and Development
reveal an epidemic: Manhattanites have been complaining about
bed bugs at six times the rate they did in 2005. On Staten Island,
the number of complaints has soared 32 times higher than it was
five years ago.
Just because
you have bed bugs does not mean that you are dirty or unsanitary.
The truth is that some of the finest hotels in the country have
bed bugs.
According
to The New York Post, bed bugs have even infested the
Metropolitan Opera House, the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, the Empire
State Building and the United Nations.
I once experienced
a problem with bed bugs myself. Back when I was much younger and
barely scraping by financially, I figured I would save a few bucks
by buying a used mattress.
That was a
huge mistake.
For weeks I
would wake up with huge red bites all over my legs.
Never, ever
again will I buy a used mattress.
Once bed bugs
arrive in your home, they can be almost impossible to get rid of
without professional help.
Throwing out
one piece of furniture or covering your mattress in plastic might
help a little bit but it will not solve the problem.
Some adult
bed bugs can live for up to 12 months without feeding at all.
Just when you
think they are gone they can come out and start feasting again.
Also, bed bugs
are great at multiplying. Female bed bugs can lay up to 5 eggs in
a single day and can lay up to 500 eggs during a lifetime.
Perhaps your
area of the country does not have a problem with bed bugs yet, but
this epidemic is spreading. Just check out the
CBS News video report posted below....
Perhaps you
saw in the news recently that some scientists have found that bed
bugs are now carrying a "superbug" known as MRSA.
Scientists
in Vancouver, Canada say that for the first time ever they have
found bed bugs that have methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
The following is a quote from a recent CTV
article about this discovery....
Researchers
discovered that a sample of the blood-sucking insects taken from
three patients who live in Vancouver's gritty Downtown Eastside
were carrying two types of drug-resistant bacteria.
Co-investigator
Dr. Marc Romney, a medical microbiologist at nearby St. Paul's
Hospital, said five bedbugs plucked from the patients or their
belongings were carrying MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus) or VRE (vancomycin-resistant enterococci). Dubbed superbugs,
the bacteria are resistant to many standard antibiotics.
The good news
is that these scientists do not have any evidence that bed bugs
are spreading MRSA to humans.
Bed bugs are
able to be infected by at
least 28 different human pathogens, but at least to this point
they are not very effective at spreading them.
Let us hope
that does not change.
It turns out
that MRSA has also been found in our supermarket meat.
For the first
time in the United States, scientists have found antibiotic-resistant
MRSA in supermarket meat.
According to
Business
Insider, "scientists at Wayne State University tested 289 raw
meat samples from 30 Detroit grocery stores. Six of the samples
were infected with the potentially deadly bacteria, including three
chicken, two beef and one turkey."
Yuck!
MRSA is not
something you want to mess around with.
This is yet
another example of how unsafe our food is becoming.
We like to
think of ourselves as so advanced, but we can't even protect ourselves
from annoying little bed bugs and we can't even keep very serious
pathogens out of our food supply.
If you stop
and think about all of the gross things in our society it can really
stress you out. For example, the next time you use a soda fountain
at a fast food restaurant there is a good chance that you may encounter
fecal contamination. Just check out the following quote from Organic
Health....
According
to a study published in the January issue of the International
Journal of Food Microbiology, nearly half of the 90 beverages
from soda fountain machines in one area in Virginia tested positive
for coliform bacteria - which
could indicate possible fecal contamination.
But getting
back to bed bugs, for those dealing with an infestation the number
one thing they want to know is what to do about it.
Well, there
was one very effective chemical known as "Propoxur", but it has
been banned by the EPA. It turns out that Propoxur “is
a known human carcinogen” and is very dangerous to children.
Some are urging
the EPA to reconsider this ban, but so far the EPA has been standing
firm.
Meanwhile,
the bed bugs continue to multiply and terrorize more Americans.
On
one bed bug forum, one woman identified as "avenae" shared a
particularly brutal bed bug horror story....
It all
started in April, woke up one morning with a red welt on my leg.
Never really thought much of it. Then it kept happening, so I
thought I had fleas, treated my animals, checked the house for
them. Never saw a single flea. Also no one else in my home was
being affected. Then I thought maybe I was having an allergic
reaction to a new soap I had bought so I stopped using that and
nothing changed. Kept realizing I was waking up in the middle
of the night scratching my body parts almost raw. The itch was
so intense it felt like a million fire ants biting me all over.
So I start researching, read up on bed bugs and searched my entire
home....nothing. But I seem to be having a sever reaction to the
bites.
Mind
you I hadn't traveled, had any visitors, nothing that would have
brought these nasty little creatures into my home.
Ever
night I wake up, every morning new red welts all over me. One
night I thought I'd wear long pants and sock and a long sleeve
shirt, only to wake up with bites all over my neck and face! STILL
could not find a single bug. It got to the point were I was crying
myself to sleep at night and taking sleeping pills just to be
able to sleep. Didn't want to start sleeping on the couch out
of fear of them following me out.
Do you have
a similar bed bug horror story?
If so, we would
love to hear about it. Please feel free to share your thoughts about
bed bugs below....
***UPDATE***
A reader named
Emily left the following comment that I think we all should consider
the next time we travel....
"I use to work
as a Hotel Manager. Trust me when I say, all hotels are infested
with bed bugs. It was terrible fighting with the corp. owners of
the property; they only weighed your safety against profits and
profits always won! We did try to kill the bugs, but nothing really
is effective so we rented out infective rooms and if guest complained,
we would offer them a discount on the room. It finally got to the
point I could not look people in the face so I left. It goes with
out saying; I would never stay in a hotel room, period! What can
you do if you must travel, I don’t know! It is a fact of life that
we must expose our selves to many nasty parasites in the environment
and most of the time we survive, but nature is coming up with much
more deadly threats all the time and it is no longer an option to
be exposed. We need to wake up to these threats."