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ciannafiggins

Cianna Figgins

the sound the bug makes at the end lol #bedbugs #fypシ #foryou #cute #baby

87 Likes, 5 Comments. TikTok video from Cianna Figgins (@ciannafiggins): "the sound the bug makes at the end lol #bedbugs #fypシ #foryou #cute #baby". original sound.

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original sound - Cianna Figgins

wynterfoxman

Wynter Foxman

Flippin bed bugs😭 #challenge #trend #viral #comedy #bedbugs

TikTok video from Wynter Foxman (@wynterfoxman): "Flippin bed bugs😭 #challenge #trend #viral #comedy #bedbugs". original sound.

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original sound - triscia

pickles.in.my.but

aidan ishoy

Bedbugs gettin lit! #fyp #foruyou #xyzcba #xyzbca #xyzabc #bedbugs

TikTok video from aidan ishoy (@pickles.in.my.but): "Bedbugs gettin lit! #fyp #foruyou #xyzcba #xyzbca #xyzabc #bedbugs". What Futures bedbugs sound like | Wakes up* | Bedbugs spittin fire 🔥. In Love With A Stripper.

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In Love With A Stripper - 645AR

arditti_band

Arditti

gotta do anything to advertise these days #bedbugs #music #sleeptight

TikTok video from Arditti (@arditti_band): "gotta do anything to advertise these days #bedbugs#music#sleeptight". This Feeling.

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This Feeling - Arditti

rice_ball_26

Rice Ball

Bed bug song #foryou #bedbugs #song #story #funny

TikTok video from Rice Ball (@rice_ball_26): "Bed bug song #foryou #bedbugs #song #story #funny". original sound.

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original sound - Rice Ball

captainkatemccue

captainkatemccue

A serious case of the bed Bug

10K Likes, 248 Comments. TikTok video from captainkatemccue (@captainkatemccue): "A serious case of the bed Bug". original sound.

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original sound - captainkatemccue

johnyjeremy

johnyjeremy

#tilktok #foryoupage #bedbug

6. 1K Likes, 219 Comments. TikTok video from johnyjeremy (@johnyjeremy): "#tilktok #foryoupage #bedbug". Apocalyptic ASMR.

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Apocalyptic ASMR - Kiyoshi

extremeheatuk

ExtremeHeatUk

Job of the day #bedbugs #heattreatmentsuk #heatwave #trendingsound #trend #viralvideo #BOSSMoves #ThatNewLookFeeling #seebio #fyp #fypシ #foryou #4u

2.2K Likes, 76 Comments. TikTok video from ExtremeHeatUk (@extremeheatuk): "Job of the day #bedbugs #heattreatmentsuk #heatwave #trendingsound #trend #viralvideo #BOSSMoves #ThatNewLookFeeling #seebio #fyp #fypシ #foryou #4u". Today’s job 3 bedroom house for bed bugs | We are using twin diesel machines today | We run the pipe work through the windows | . ... Heat Waves.

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Heat Waves - Glass Animals

Bedbugs: The Social and Environmental History of an Urban Pest

In today’s post, Pests in the City: Flies, Bedbugs, Cockroaches, and Rats author Dawn Day Biehler examines the historical roots of bedbug outbreaks and how social inequality continues to exacerbate the problem for many city dwellers. Biehler also explains how American domestic practices have altered the genetic makeup of bedbugs, making them even more tenacious pests than the ones previous generations had to deal with. Finally, she argues for the need to view domestic spaces as both natural and social in order to get to the root of the bedbug problem.

In May of 1999, the New York Times column, “For Your Information,” included a letter from a reader who recalled visits from bedbugs—in spite of his mother’s bedtime blessings—during his Depression-era childhood. Having gone decades without suffering a bite, the reader inquired, “Has this lowly bug been completely chased from the city?”[1]

The reader’s timing was eerie. That year, Louis Sorkin of the American Museum of Natural History noted that his office had “received more bedbug specimens for identification in the past three years than in the previous 20.” Soon, discreet transactions with entomologists and pest management professionals could no longer contain the growing, tenacious multitude of bugs. Within months, tenants and landlords, hoteliers and cab drivers, retailers and office managers across the United States confessed to their struggles with this tiny bloodsucker.

Fifteen years later, it appears that Cimex lectularius is back with us to stay, after two generations of Americans grew up knowing little of the subject of the bedtime rhyme. We have much to learn from our grandparents’ and great-grandparents’ generations, including many ingenious—and laborious—techniques for avoiding and controlling bedbugs. However, I am more interested in what bedbug histories reveal about our relationships with fellow humans and with all of nature—social and environmental lessons for living with bedbugs and other creatures we call pests.

Bedbugs bite a human hand, leaving itchy welts. From Hugo Hartnack, 202 Common Household Pests of North America. Chicago: Hartnack Publishing, 1939

First, some of our progressive forebears realized that bedbugs were creatures of community and supported collective management strategies as part of a broader healthy housing agenda. In 1938, Chicago public housing manager Sherman Aldrich understood that the low-income families moving into his gleaming, new buildings could not afford effective extermination and were therefore “not to be held responsible for the verminous state of their houses.” Yet if just one new tenant—perhaps fearful of stigma and reprisal—brought in bedbugs from their old home and failed to report it, the bugs could spread rapidly from unit to unit, bringing sleepless nights, despair, and paranoia to the entire community.

So it was both progressive and pragmatic for housing managers and health advocates to foster a tone of openness and support when it came to all fast-spreading vermin. Aldrich required all new residents to bring their belongings to a safe off-site fumigation facility to ensure freedom from bedbugs upon move-in. Families suddenly relieved of long-time infestations gladly cooperated telling Aldrich “this is the best thing you have done with the project.”

Judging from some recent legislation about bedbugs, we are beginning to learn this lesson, but we still have some work to do. A new law in New Hampshire requires landlords to pay for initial bedbug treatments, helping expedite a community response. But another provision allows landlords to pass along the charges for treating a unit to a tenant deemed responsible for the infestation.[2] This could encourage residents in multifamily housing to hide bedbug problems, as a tenant might be deemed responsible simply because she was the first or only one to report the problem.

Bedbugs hatch a scheme to stow away in a moving van in a cartoon from the 1930s. From Hugo Hartnack, 202 Common Household Pests of North America. Chicago: Hartnack Publishing, 1939

Second, the bedbugs that have returned have changed. Americans’ practices in our domestic ecosystems reshaped the very genetic makeup of bedbugs as well as other vermin. We might celebrate the success of the pesticide DDT in ridding homes of bedbugs in the 1950s, but resistant bugs appeared that very decade, often among people struggling with unstable and substandard housing conditions. This means that while we should hold onto the collective and destigmatizing aspects of Sherman Aldrich’s bedbug management scheme, we cannot cling to solely chemical solutions. Furthermore, it reminds us that even modern technologies like pesticides cannot separate our homes from nature and changing urban ecosystems.

Third, all of our homes are part of the urban ecosystem, but some of us have more resources to manage or control our piece of that ecosystem than others. Media coverage of outbreaks in luxury hotels, limousines, and boutiques seem to suggest that bedbugs are great equalizers, and it is true that bugs have no preference for the blood of any social class. But scandal and schadenfreude distract us from persistent issues of environmental injustice, housing access, and housing quality that shape the broader distribution of bedbugs.

Around the turn of the twentieth century, the most affluent Americans were the first city-dwellers to bring bedbug infestations under control. They achieved near freedom from bugs by hiring household staff to toil away, cleaning up bugs and their eggs and discreetly containing new outbreaks. Low-income residents could not afford housekeepers or new, effective—and dangerous—chemical treatments, so they poured their own time and sweat into killing bugs as well as they could. Surrounded by other struggling families, they faced a high risk of reintroduction. Such is the case with today’s bedbug resurgence—wealthier families harness their assets to pay for the most effective treatments, while poorer bedbug hosts suffer bites and sleepless nights.

Taken together, these lessons speak to the political nature of bedbug infestation. Reformers once hoped that progressive housing policies would protect vulnerable communities from homes that harbored bedbugs and other health hazards. Yet, much low-income housing today remains unhealthy for lack of public support for reinvestment and code enforcement. In the absence of such support, reliance upon pesticide technologies to rid homes of unwanted creatures backfired. Bedbugs occupy the niches created by inequality and denial of nature. Acknowledging that our homes are both natural and social might be the first step in helping communities manage the bug that’s here to stay.

Dawn Day Biehler is assistant professor of geography and environmental studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She lives with her family in Washington, D.C.

“Dawn Day Biehler treats readers to a surprising, engaging, and compassionate look into the changing lives of pests in urban America. In so doing, she reveals the deep and enduring economic, social, and racial inequalities that plague the human inhabitants of cities and enable these unwanted companion animals to flourish. ”—Gregg Mitman, author of Breathing Space: How Allergies Shape our Lives and Landscapes

“The environmental history of people and animals has for too long focused on charismatic megafauna—wolves, grizzlies, cougars—when in fact the day-to-day lives of a great many people are much more intimately involved with less fearsome but rather more troublesome creatures. In this fascinating and important book, Dawn Day Biehler brilliantly demonstrates how much we can learn about environmental politics and social justice by studying the pests who share our urban homes with us.”—William Cronon


[1] Daniel B. Schneider, “F. Y. I.” New York Times, May 2, 1999. Online edition: <http://www.nytimes.com/1999/05/02/nyregion/fyi-492485.html&gt;

[2] “New Hampshire’s new law regarding bedbugs.” Bedbugger, August 26, 2013. <http://bedbugger.com/2013/08/26/new-hampshires-new-law-regarding-bed-bugs/&gt;

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Destroying bedbugs - ShoppingSamara

Bedbugs for many of us are just little monsters from the stories our grandmothers told us. It is unlikely that anyone knows that they can easily settle in our apartments and it is not so easy to make them move out. Bed bugs cause huge problems, and the very idea of ​​a worm thriving on our body, feeding on blood, soiling our bedding, is simply disgusting. Let's check out how to detect their presence and how to get rid of them!

Only about a decade ago it was claimed that bed bugs were completely eradicated in highly developed countries. Unfortunately, more affordable travel and population growth have meant that we are dealing with them again. It seems to us that if we take care of the cleanliness of the apartment, then there is no chance that they will start up. But this is not so - the bugs move very easily, they can be brought on clothes, in bags or shoes. And then they settle in our bedding and mattresses! Nowadays, there is even a "bed bug", which is especially noticeable in hotels. To destroy them, it is better to use the services of disinfestation, which are available on the website https://misterklop.ru/.

Do you have bed bugs at home?

Unfortunately, we only become aware of their presence after a few bites. The bite itself won't hurt you because bed bugs inject analgesic acid. Only in the morning there is a burning swelling and white scars. If it were all an inconvenience, we probably wouldn't be making such a drama, but the fear of bed bugs stems from the fact that in crowded cities, they can carry dangerous, sometimes even fatal diseases.

However, by observing carefully, we can find out if these insects are present in the house. Bed bugs often leave droppings and eggs on the seams and folds of mattresses. On light linen, it is easy to see the bloody stains and droppings left by them. Small, non-aggressive insects about the size of a poppy seed often roam the sheets.

Bed bugs live not only in the bed, but in any dark place from where they can easily attack - it can be a bookshelf, a closet with clothes, and even the back of a picture. This makes it extremely difficult to fight them.

How to deal with bed bugs?

  • First of all, we must remove everything - really every thing that is in the apartment, because the eggs can be anywhere. A professional company can help with this thorough cleaning. Its specialists are trained and know which elements of the apartment are most often the habitat of bed bugs. Bed bugs can go dormant for almost a year, so if you clean everything superficially and think that there are no more problems, you can be very mistaken, and in a few months you will again meet with a swarm of bed bugs. Particular attention should be paid to blankets, especially quilted ones, mattresses, toys, couches and everything soft and cloth.
  • If possible, wash everything at the highest possible temperature, or - in order not to destroy, for example, stuffed animals, put them in the freezer for at least 2 weeks. When washing, pay attention to the markings on the labels so as not to damage the clothes.
  • It is also necessary to vacuum every crevice in the house, sometimes it will even be necessary to dismantle the furniture and remove the eggs inside the bed frame. This also applies to drawers, chests of drawers, pictures, etc. Use a vacuum cleaner with a sealed bag, which, after cleaning, is additionally packed in a rigid film, tightly tied and taken as far from the house as possible.

How to permanently get rid of bed bugs

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In our time, the problem of ridding an apartment or house of various blood-sucking insects has not lost its relevance. All our dwellings are also visited by cockroaches, bed bugs coexist in the beds. Insects cause a lot of trouble. Often it is not so easy to get rid of uninvited guests. The destruction of bedbugs should be carried out with the help of specialists. This guarantees complete disposal of the insect.

Where do bedbugs come from

When a person encounters bloodsuckers living in an apartment, he wonders where they can come from. The apartment is well-groomed, the order is constantly put in it, the pets are clean, they are regularly processed. But the measures taken are not a guarantee of safety. Everyone can have bedbugs, residents of old houses and communal apartments are especially vulnerable.

Insects move quickly, capturing new territories. In villages, bedbugs can settle in a barn, poultry houses, and chicken coops. Bedbugs are quite tenacious insects and can live for more than a year in the most unsuitable conditions. They can get into the house in different ways:

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