Literature
首页EnglishHealth News

Bedbugs Biting All Over U.S.

来源:WebMD Medical News
摘要:July29,2010--Thebedbugsarebiting,andnotjustinNewYorkCity。Thelargest-eversurveyonbedbuginfestationssuggeststhatthecreepy,blood-suckingcreaturesarebeingfoundandfoughtallovertheUnitedStates--insingle-familyhomes,apartmentbuildingsandcondos,hotelsand......

点击显示 收起

July 29, 2010 -- The bedbugs are biting, and not just in New York City.

The largest-ever survey on bedbug infestations suggests that the creepy, blood-sucking creatures are being found and fought all over the United States -- in single-family homes, apartment buildings and condos, hotels and motels, retail establishments, and even schools and churches.

The survey, sponsored by the National Pest Management Association (NPMA), found that bedbug-related calls to exterminators have risen by 81% over the last decade and by 57% over the last five years.

Bedbug Concerns Increasing

Questionnaires were sent to nearly 6,000 pest control businesses across the country between January and April of this year. Just over 500 responded.

According to the results:

And survey respondents from all over the country overwhelmingly reported the belief that bedbug infestations were increasing in their region.

“A few years ago, many of our members were getting just a few bedbug-related calls a year or none at all, but that has changed” NPMA spokeswoman Missy Henriksen tells WebMD. “This study confirms the reach of these bugs is certainly broadening.”

New York Mayor Wants ‘Bedbug Czar’

But the extent to which public awareness and concern has contributed to what NPMA calls a "global pandemic" is not entirely clear.

In New York City, for example, hundreds of bedbug-related stories have appeared in the media over the past few years.

A panel appointed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently reported a 63% increase in residential bedbug complaints in 2008, following a 35% increase in 2007.

This and several high-profile infestations this month at upscale New York department stores reportedly prompted Bloomberg to call for a city "bedbug czar" this week.

Bedbug expert Louis Sorkin, who is an entomologist with the American Museum of National History in New York, says the media attention probably has played some part in the bed bug rise.

“People are certainly more aware and they are more worried,” he says. “In this environment, it may be that people think they have bedbugs when they really have some other bug.”

Bedbug Populations Rising

But Sorkin says that bedbug infestations are clearly on the rise, in part because the bugs have developed a resistance to many commonly used chemical pesticides and, in part, because people are traveling more.

作者: 2010-7-30
医学百科App—中西医基础知识学习工具
  • 相关内容
  • 近期更新
  • 热文榜
  • 医学百科App—健康测试工具