FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
The Cost of Bed Bugs
Treatment Can Be Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars
Estimates place the cost of a bed bug incident in a single room to be as much as $6,000 to $7,000 not including potential litigation or the cost of negative public perception. And these costs rise exponentially if the problem is allowed to spread.
Chuck Nelson, co-owner of Dog Inspectors says, “The key to controlling the costs is to find them early and often. We have experienced a significant increase in the number of bed bug inspections, both Residential and Commercial in recent months. Hotels, apartment complexes, retirement homes, furniture rental companies, college dormitories are all vulnerable. This problem is growing and we don’t expect it to go away anytime soon.”
In the EPA’S NATIONAL BED BUG SUMMIT Participant Recommendations (April 15, 2009) it was recommended that, “Bed bugs need to be moved to the top of the list…. Preventative and ongoing inspection is necessary to address the problem….” This is the only way to protect against a widespread infestation and its associated costs.
Nelson explains, “Bed bugs are very difficult to detect with the naked eye by even the most skilled and trained inspector, they lay up to 5 eggs per day and can survive as long as a year on one feeding. Making matters worse, there are no currently effective treatments to kill their eggs. So it is easy to see just how quickly a bed bug problem can get out of hand.” Another factor which compounds the detection problem is that only 30% of the population is allergic to bed bugs which can conceal an existing problem for long periods of time. This delay has resulted in numerous cases in which the costs of treating widespread, full scale infestations has run into the Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars.
Nelson points out, “The EPA recommended that instituting regular and on-going preventative inspections is imperative to find and treat problems early. We also strongly maintain that re-inspections after treatment are vital to determine that no eggs have since hatched and that the bugs have been eradicated.”
More than 10 years of research both here and abroad has confirmed that one of the most effective technologies available for bed bug detection is trained and certified dogs. According to Sosa, “…a dog’s keen, superior sense of smell enables them to locate bed bugs that are virtually invisible to the naked eye with better than 95% accuracy and to do it very quickly. They can even distinguish between live and dead bugs making them an invaluable tool in the fight against this growing epidemic.”
Dog Inspectors is the first company in
To learn more about the EPA’ National Bed Bug Summit Participant Recommendations, go to http://www.epa.gov/oppfead1/cb/ppdc/bedbug-summit/partic-recom.pdf
MEDIA ONLY CONTACT (S):
Chuck Nelson
of Dog Inspectors, LLC
+1-615-771-6842
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*Print resolution images can be requested from above media contact person using the noted contact info.
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