Getting Rid Of Bedbugs More Toxic & Deadly Than Bug
What’s worse than a plague of bed bugs? The toxic plume used to get rid of them.
Actually, it’s the ignorance and complacency towards insecticides that have led to more than dozens of sicknesses and one death.
The article says that bedbugs can’t spread disease; but, they are known to carry MRSA. How much power they have to actually spread disease remains to be seen.
Think you might have bed bugs? Diagnosis tip: bedbugs leave a straight row of three bites. Just think – breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
~Health Freedoms
Scores got sick, 1 died trying to kill bedbugs
ATLANTA (AP) — Bedbugs don’t make you sick. But the poisons used to kill them can.
A government study released Thursday found that dozens of Americans have fallen ill from the insecticides, and a North Carolina woman died after using 18 cans of chemical fogger to attack the tiny blood suckers.
Because many of the cases, including the lone death, were do-it-yourselfers who misused the chemicals or applied the wrong product, federal health officials are warning consumers to be careful and urging them to call professionals.
The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Preventioncounted 80 illnesses and one death linked to the insecticides over three years. Most of the cases were in New York City, the apparent epicenter of a recent U.S. bedbug comeback.
The CDC was able to get data from 12 states, and only seven had reports of such illnesses. One was New York, where bedbugs have become a highly publicized problem and where health officials have also been extra vigilant about reporting unusual chemical poisonings.
Investigators were relieved to find a relatively small number of cases.
“At this point, it’s not a major public health problem,” said Dr.Geoff Calvert, a CDC investigator who co-authored the study.
Bedbugs are wingless, reddish-brown insects that bite people and animals to draw blood for their meals. Though their bites can cause itching and welts, they are not known to spread disease.
“There’s nothing inherently dangerous about bedbugs,” said Dr. Susi Vassallo, an emergency medicine doctor who works at New York City’s Bellevue Hospital Center and occasionally treats patients who report bedbug problems.
But the insects are a major hassle. In recent national surveys of exterminators, bedbugs were named the toughest pest to get ridcscsund of. They can hide for months, only come out at night and can be hard to spot with the human eye.
They are also creepy, provoking intense fear in the minds of many people unnerved by the threat that an almost invisible insect could emerge at night to drink their blood.
“Sometimes people get hysterical,” said Theresa Braine, a New York City journalist who lived with bedbugs in her apartment for a year and now writes a weekly Internet column about the pests.
The CDC study was the first to look at the dangers of bedbug insecticides. Researchers reviewed reports from California, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Texas and Washington.
They counted 111 cases from 2003 through 2010. Most occurred in the last few years, when bedbug reports rose across the country. More than half were in New York City.
People suffered headaches, dizziness, breathing problems and nausea and vomiting. More than 80 percent of the illnesses were considered mild.
The one death was a 65-year-old woman from Rocky Mount, N.C., who had a history of heart trouble and other ailments.
In 2010, she and her husband used nine cans of insecticide fogger one day, then the same amount two days later, without opening doors and windows to air out their home afterward. She also covered her body and hair with another bedbug product, and covered her hair with a plastic shower cap.
Two other illnesses were carpet cleaners who had not been told the apartment had recently been treated with pesticides. Two more were emergency medical technicians who responded to a scene and were exposed to a white powder believed to be a pesticide.
CDC officials said they could not be absolutely certain that the insecticides caused every problem. For example, there was no record of an autopsy on the North Carolina woman. It’s possible that some of the illnesses were coincidental to the insecticide exposure.
But it’s also likely these kinds of illnesses are under-reported, Calvert said.
About 90 percent of the cases were linked to pyrethroids or pyrethrins, insecticides commonly used against bedbugs. Such products are not a health risk to most people but should still be applied by a trained exterminator, said Vassallo, who is also a toxicologist and a clinical associate professor at NYU Langone Medical Center.
But in some cases, an improper and more dangerous product was used. That happened in 2010 in Ohio, where an uncertified exterminator used malathion to rid an apartment of bedbugs, even though the chemical is never supposed to be used indoors. A couple and their 6-year-old child got sick.
CDC officials suggested people trying to rid their homes of bedbugs should first thoroughly vacuum all floors and furniture and wash linens.
If it doesn’t work, call an exterminator to apply the chemicals, and then carefully follow their directions about re-entering the room and airing it out, they said.
Exterminators can be expensive. Braine said it cost her more than $1,000 for one treatment of her small Brooklyn apartment, which was only briefly successful. She has since moved to another place.
For products that are sold to the public, labeling could be a little better.
“We think it would be helpful if they were easier to read, understand, and better conveyed the message that the insecticide can be toxic and should be used with great care,” Calvert said.
A spokeswoman for the National Pest Management Association, a trade group, said the industry is continually looking at improving its labeling. But some people just don’t read labels.
For example, foggers are not recommended for bedbugs, she noted. And it appears some people use much more than is recommended.
“We live in a society where people believe that if a little bit is good, more is better,” said the spokeswoman, Missy Henriksen. But sometimes more is dangerous, she added.
___
CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr
Online:
By MIKE STOBBE – AP Medical Writer
Source:
http://news.yahoo.com/scores-got-sick-1-died-trying-kill-bedbugs-160434462.html
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Google “dichotomous earth”, it kills bedbugs, and is totally non-toxic.
The product Gary mentioned above is spelled “diatomaceous”–as in diatomaceous earth, a powder made from pulverized seashells.
YES YES YES! I ingest literally I drink Diatomaceous Earth – FOOD GRADE daily. It is NON-TOXIC to humans, pets and even worms but deadly to bedbugs, ants, cockroaches, and other bugs so you can drink a teaspoon of the food grade powder in juice or water to kill off parasites in your body – the powder chops up the bugs in your intestine and colon, and kills internal parasites.
You spread the Diatomaceous Earth FOOD GRADE (please get the food grade ONLY) in the area where the bugs are in your house – bed bugs, cock roaches whatever kind of bug you have – even sprinkle it on your plants earth and see the bugs dead within almost hours or 24 hours. No toxic fumes or worry of harming your pets. It REALLY DOES WORK! Youtube it or google it.
To be sure just sprinkle it all around the edges of the walls baseboards or directly on your bed mattress… sleep on the couch for a night and see what happens when you vacuum up the powder off the bed in the morning. Bye Bye Bed Bugs.
Any questions renatalove@shaw.ca
Like to know what else you used we tried that here in ontario and zilch the pest were talking a walk init un affected—it could be they are mutated ( not a surprise since the US and Canadian gov’t have been collabarating on this for decades–so would like to know what else–the only thing that worked was a good chlorinated –or ammonia wash—so would be interested in yor insight
Tony
This article is minimizing the severity of chemical injuries such as these. Being chemically poisoned is one way to become cross sensitized to all chemicals in the environment which is a condition known as multiple chemical sensitivities. Many MCS suffers developed their condition after being injured by pesticides. I bet you anything that many of the victims have since experienced a long list of mysterious symptoms that their careproviders haven’t been able to diagnose or treat. Some people will mostly recover but not know that they are now in a fragile state and at risk of developing full blow MCS the next time they paint or carpet their home or experience some other kind of heavy chemical exposure. The others will, if they are lucky, eventually figure out what is happening so that at least they can understand their condition and avoid chemicals as best as possible so as to not worsen their condition.