Executive summary by darmansjah
IT’S BECOME A RITE OF SUMMER for the talking
heads on the local news programs: a hysteria-including hotel bedbug epidemic
story. The teary tales of vacations ruined, the zooms on the tiny red welts,
and the infographic of the life cycle of the tiny invaders whose Latin name, Cimex lectularius, makes them wound like villains in
a summer block-buster. It makes for must-see TV, but what should you believed?
Let’s exterminate some of the common misconceptions.
It is a new problem.
Actually, no. bedbugs like to live in wood and fabric, close to their food
supply, which is us. They are long-term tenants, having infested homes and inns
for thousands of years. “So what has changed?” asks Jody Gangloff-Kaufmann, an
urban entomologist at Cornell University. We’ve started paying attention to bed
bugs. “Public awareness skyrocketed,” she says. Thank to news stories, TV
reports, and blogs dedicated to Cimex
sightings, just about every bedbug report is treated with only slightly less
excitement than a bird flu outbreak. In fact ,says Gangloff-Kaufmann, the bugs
weren’t as bad in 2012 as they were in 2010, but the coverage continues, making
it seem to many travelers as if bedbugs are on an unstoppable march to conquer
our planet.
You will bring bedbugs home from your travels. You might, if
you happen to sleep in a bed with bedbugs, and if you leave your clothes and
luggage on the bed, and if those bedbugs decide to climb from the infested bed
to your luggage, and if you unpack your luggage on your bed, and if the bugs
disembark and set up house in your bed. That’s a lot of ifs. A quick inspection
of the mattress and behind the headboard of the hotel room should reveal
bedbugs’ shed skins, eggs, and hatched eggs even in daylight (when bugs are not
active), and if that doesn’t give them away, then the telltale overripe
raspberry odor will. For those with an overabundance of caution, Louis Sorkin,
an entomologist with New York’s American Museum of Natural History, suggests
not putting clothes and luggage on your bed when traveling. Instead, he
advises, “hang up the coat and place luggage in the bathroom when you first
arrive.” And when you return home, put your luggage in the garage on your
traveling clothes in the laundry immediately.
Bedbug bites are painful and cause disease. No and no. half
of the hotel guests who get bitten don’t even know it; the other half may
experience some itching and skin inflammation for a few days. According to
Jerome Goddard, a professor of medical and veterinary entomology at Mississippi
State University and a leading bedbug expert, “It’s no worse than a mosquito.”
And hope for a bed bug over a mosquito when it comes to carrying disease.
Bedbugs have been studied extensively as
possible carriers for everything from hepatitis to HIV. The result?
Nada. I asked Goddard if he’d evr been bitten by one of the bugs in his
laboratory, to which he replied, “How do you think I’ve fed them all these
years?”
If they’re in one room, then they’re in every room of the
hotel. Wrong. “In many hotels, the infestation are limited,” says Michael Potter,
a professor of urban and medical entomology at the University of Kentucky.
“Just because you see a hotel named in a bedbug registry website doesn’t mean all the rooms are
infested.” As a matter of fact, some hotels may have only one or two rooms affected
by the blood-sucking insects, so fleeing the hotel may be an irrational move if
you see evidence of the bugs. Instead of over reacting, insist politely on an
insect free room.
Online bedbug reviews are trustworthy. Not really. Reports
are often inaccurate and outdated. Even attempts to quantify bedbug activity in
a more scientific way often fall short. Consider exterminator Orkin’s annual
bedbug report, which in 2012 crowned Chicago as America’s bedbug capital,
followed by Detroit and Los Angeles. According to Orkin, the least bedbuggy
cities are Springfield, Illinois; Portland, Orego; and Sioux City, Iowa.
Problem is, Chicago is a major city with lots of people (and Orkin branches).
Soux City? Not so much. So it’s folly to use an online database of bedbug
sightings or even a more scientific survey of insect sightings to plan your
vacation.
You’ll find plenty of jittery hotel guests this summer who
think they’re bound to sleep wit hbedbugs. One commonly cited survey by pest
management company Steritech claims a quarter of the hotel rooms in the United
States needed treatment for bedbugs, but few bother to note that even if rooms
were deemed to need treatment, that doesn’t necessarily mean they were
infested, nor that guests would have been bitten. And bear in mind, these
pest-control folks have a product to sell. Kind of like, ahem, the news media.
Truth is, these insects can pop up just about anywhere, not
only in hotels. They’re in apartments, churches, hospitals, laundromats, movie
theatres, and offices right in your neighborhood. Wherever there’s blood,
you’ll find the bugs. There’s really no escaping them this summer or any
summer. What can you escape from? The hype. So switch the channel or turn off
the TV and relax. You’ve on vacation.
No comments:
Post a Comment