Category Archives: Bed Bugs United States

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  Wednesday 26th of November 2025 15:13 PM


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Pesticides – Bed Bugs – State of Delaware – Delaware …

Vigilant Monitoring including a check of secondhand furniture, beds, and couches for any signs of bed bug infestations. Prevention & Control by removing clutter where Bed Bugs hide, sealing cracks to eliminate habitat, encasing mattresses/box springs, and checking luggage when returning from trip. Non-Chemical treatment e.g., vacuuming, heat treatment of clothing, bedding and furniture. Pesticide treatment with products explicitly labeled for use to control of bed bugs and carefully follow labeled directions.

Fact Sheets, available in both English and Spanish, provide the most current information regarding Bed Bugs including inspection and identification, current treatment methods and suggested best management practices and are available below.

If you have any additional questions not answered in this outreach information contact the Delaware Department of Agriculture Pesticide section at (302)-698-4500. Additional Bed Bug information can be viewed on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) website using the following link: http://www.epa.gov/bedbugs/

We want to recognize EPA for providing a grant to the Virginia Department of Agriculture, Office of Pesticide Services, for undertaking an outreach and education project to provide information regarding Bed Bugs.

David Pyne, Administrator Send E-Mail Phone (302) 698-4570 Fax: (302) 697-4483

For Questions Regarding this website: Send E-Mail Website managed by: Shere Nichols

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Pesticides - Bed Bugs - State of Delaware - Delaware ...

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california — Got bed bugs? Bedbugger.com

by nobugsonme on September 19, 2010 5 comments

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by nobugsonme on March 20, 2009 1 comment

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by nobugsonme on January 29, 2009 5 comments

in bed bug bites, bed bug sniffing dogs, bed bugs, bedbugs, california, catching a bed bug, College Station, colleges, dorms, faculty, florida, health, hitchhiking, k9s, money, off-campus, on-campus, parents, proactive, reactive, san diego, San Diego State University, SDSU, spread, staff, students, texas, Texas A&M, Texas A&M University, The Daily Aztec, thermal, university of florida

by nobugsonme on January 14, 2009 1 comment

in bed bugs, bedbugs, berkeley, Berkeley Food and Housing Project, california, City of Berkeley, homeless, Men's Overnight Shelter, money, shelters

by nobugsonme on December 16, 2008

in bed bugs, bedbugs, california, connecticut, economy, emotional, finances, health, money, san jose, stamford, stress

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california — Got bed bugs? Bedbugger.com

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ADH: Bed Bugs – Arkansas Department of Health

Bed bugs have been common in U.S. history. Although bed bug populations dropped dramatically during the mid-20th century, the United States is one of many countries now experiencing a resurgence in the population of bed bugs. Though the exact cause is not known, experts suspect the resurgence is associated with increased resistance of bed bugs to available pesticides, greater international and domestic travel, lack of knowledge regarding control of bed bugs due to their prolonged absence, and the continuing decline or elimination of effective vector/pest control programs at state and local public health agencies.

Although not known to transmit any human disease, they leave a trail of potentially itchy or painful bite reactions, and costly extermination bills in their wake. Most people are not aware they have been bitten because they inject an anesthetic and an anticoagulant that prevents a person from feeling the bite. The bites look like little red bumps; sometimes resembling mosquito bites, but people who are more sensitive to the bite can have localized allergic reactions. Scratching the bitten areas may lead to infection.

Bed bugs are small, flat insects that feed on the blood of sleeping people and animals. They are reddish-brown in color, wingless, and range from 1 to 7 millimeters in length. They can live several months without a blood meal.

Infestations of these insects usually occur around or near the areas where people sleep or spend a significant period of time. These areas include apartments, shelters, rooming houses, hotels, nursing homes, hospitals, cruise ships, buses, trains, and dorm rooms.

Bed bugs are experts at hiding. They hide during the day in places such as seams of mattresses, box springs, bed frames, headboards, dresser tables, cracks or crevices, behind wallpaper, and under any clutter or objects around a bed. Their small flat bodies allow them to fit into the smallest of spaces and they can remain in place for long periods of time, even without a blood meal. Bed bugs can travel over 100 feet in one night, but they tend to live within 8 feet of where people sleep. Bed bugs are usually transported from place to place as people travel. Bed bugs travel in the seams and folds of luggage, overnight bags, folded clothes, bedding, furniture, and anywhere else where they can hide. Most people do not realize they can transport stow-away bed bugs as they travel potentially infesting new areas, including their homes, as they relocate.

One of the easiest ways to identify a bed bug infestation is by bite marks that appear on the face, neck, arms, hands, and any other body parts. However, these bite marks may take as long as 14 days to develop in some people so it is important to look for other clues when determining if bed bugs have infested an area. These signs may include the exoskeletons of bed bugs after molting, bed bugs in the fold of mattresses and sheets, a sweet musty odor, and rusty-colored blood spots from their blood-filled fecal material that is often excreted on the mattress or nearby furniture. Everyone is at risk for bed bugs bites when visiting an infested area. However, anyone who travels frequently and shares living and sleeping quarters where other people have previously slept has an increased risk for being bitten and for spreading a bed bug infestation.

An integrated approach to bed bug control involving federal, state and local public health professionals, together with pest management professionals, housing authorities and private citizens, will promote development and understanding of the best methods for managing and controlling bed bugs and preventing future infestations. Research, training and public education are critical to an effective strategy for reducing public health issues associated with the resurgence of bed bug populations.For questions about pesticide use and treatment of occupied areas for bed bugs, call the Plant Board at 501-225-1598.

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ADH: Bed Bugs - Arkansas Department of Health

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Landlord Responsibility for Bedbugs in Arizona | eHow

money section Saving & Spending Real Estate Business & Career Insurance Retirement Investing eHow Now eHow Personal Finance Money Managing Consumer Rights Landlord Responsibility for Bedbugs in Arizona

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Leah Waldron is a travel, research and LGBT news writer based in Boston. Writing in both print and online media, Waldron has contributed to "Curve Magazine," "USA Today," "Sun Sentinel," "The Houston Chronicle" and more. Waldron has a bachelor's and master's degree in creative writing from Florida State University and is currently working on her first novel.

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According to a November, 2010, article in Arizona State University's State Press news magazine, more than one million residents in the state have fallen victim to the bedbug epidemic, which has penetrated 12 to 15 percent of the state. When it comes to rental property bedbug extermination, responsibility is in the hands of both the tenant the landlord.

Under current Arizona law, the tenant is responsible for bedbug extermination, but new legislation is in the works to change this. The pressure to change extermination responsibility laws comes in the wake of new legislative measures across the nation such as New York's Bedbug Disclosure Act, which requires landlords to release any infestation records from the previous year to new and existing tenants.

In February of 2011, a new bill was sent to the Arizona state Senate that identifies shared responsibility for bedbug extermination between tenants and landlords. Arizona lawmakers have approved the new bill, but the state must pass the bill in 2011 for the new legislation to pass. Under the new law, all financial responsibility will fall on the landlord, but only if the tenant complies with certain pre-set obligations such as keeping his unit free of bedbug-infested materials.

Under the proposed February, 2011 legislation, landlords will be responsible for keeping a bedbug-free property, providing bedbug prevention and education literature to all tenants and picking up the bill for a licensed pest control company to examine the unit within seven days of a reported bedbug discovery. If bedbugs are found, the landlord must pay for extermination. Before the treatment starts, landlords must provide written notification within three business days of the first pest control application.

While the new bedbug legislation would place termination on the shoulders of the landlord, tenants also play a role in the extermination process, particularly when it comes to pre- and post-mitigation compliance. For example, under the new law, tenants must report an infestation immediately, provide open access to their apartments or rental units for extermination or examination purposes and comply with any pest control company procedures. Tenants are also responsible for keeping any bedbug-infested materials out of the apartment to help prevent future outbreaks.

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Landlord Responsibility for Bedbugs in Arizona | eHow

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Anchorage AK Dermatologist Doctors – Bed Bugs Bites, Signs, in …

Bed Bugs Center - Anchorage, AK Anchorage Dermatologist Doctors for Bed Bugs

Type of Physician: Dermatologist

What is a Dermatologist?

A certification by the Board of Dermatology. Practitioners treat pediatric and adult patients with disorders of the skin, mouth, hair, and nails as well as a number of sexually transmitted diseases. They also have expertise in the care of normal skin, the prevention of skin diseases and cancers, and in the management of cosmetic disorders of the skin such as hair loss and scars.

Specialty: Dermatology

Common Name: Skin Doctor

Anchorage is a consolidated city-borough in the U.S. state of Alaska. Anchorage has been named All-America City four times, in 1956, 1965, 1984/85, and 2002, by the National Civic League. It has also been named by Kiplinger as the most tax friendly city in the United States. (Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchorage)

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Anchorage AK Dermatologist Doctors - Bed Bugs Bites, Signs, in ...

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