Do we have illegal aliens to thank for reintroducing bedbugs to the U.S.?
Bedbugs Aren’t Just Back, They’re Spreading
by NPR Staff
August 21, 2010
A bedbug enjoys the the ectoparasitic life.
August 21, 2010 Bedbugs are spreading.
At first, they appeared in places that you might expect: dense city centers such as New York, where officials may seek a bed bug czar, and San Francisco, which is trying landlord-education programs to keep the pests away.
But now, there are reports of bedbug infestations in homes and hotels from Ohio to Texas.
The stories are downright creepy. Exterminator James Self, who owns Ameritex Pest Control in Beaumont, Texas, says he was called out to one bedbug-riddled site that was like a scene from a horror movie.
“There were spots all over the walls, and I didn’t know what that was,” Self recalls. “I thought maybe it was some wallpaper decoration or something. But as I approached it, it was totally covered in bedbugs — more than I’ve ever seen. And that’s the one where we had to rip up the carpet, throw away all the furniture. It was terrible.”
‘You Should Be Worried’
This business of feeding on other people… I think we all know some people like that do that, don’t we now? …Maybe bedbugs aren’t so awfully different than somebody we know.
- Michael Raupp
Infestations like that are popping up across the country at an alarming frequency.
“You should be worried — very, very, very worried,” says Michael Raupp, an entomologist at the University of Maryland who spoke with NPR’s Audie Cornish about the bedbug resurgence. Raupp runs a website called “Bug of the Week,” and this week’s star is — you guessed it — the bedbug.
“They’re really not just for bedrooms anymore,” he warns. “They really have become widespread almost in any kind of establishment where people live and sleep, throughout both small and large cities.”
Raupp says bedbugs go where the food is. And for these critters, the “food” is sleeping human beings.
“The problem is, as people go about their daily act of going to an office or going to a movie theater, for that matter, the probability that they are going to bring bedbugs with them increases,” he says. “As people move about,” Raupp says, “they are unwittingly bringing bedbugs with them.”
There was a time in American history when bedbugs were just accepted as a part of life, he notes.
“Prior to the First World War, prior to the DDT era and the time of our synthetic/organic pesticides, bedbugs were commonplace,” Raupp says. “That old rhyme, ‘Goodnight, sleep tight, don’t let the bedbugs bite,’ harkens to the colonial era in the U.S., when bedbugs were commonplace in taverns and inns.”
It seems they could achieve that same ubiquity in the U.S. once again.
Borderless Bugs
“We’re now in the era where people travel everywhere,” Raupp says. “They just don’t go to major cities like London or Paris. We have people going to second world countries and third world countries where, frankly, bedbugs are commonplace. And these guys are real troopers — they’re hitchhikers and stowaways.”
“Whenever we travel, there’s always a possibility that we can bring bedbugs home with us,” Raupp says. “And bedbugs don’t discriminate. This is not a matter of poor sanitation or poor housekeeping or uncleanliness.”
So how do people know if they’ve got a bedbug infestation? Raupp says your skin can tell you.
“One of the first symptoms that you’ll see of a bedbug infestation is unusual bites,” Raupp says. “And these bites aren’t going to be on your ankles, where the mosquitoes usually bite you, or on your arms. These bites could be on your neck, they could be on your shoulders, they could be down on your legs somewhere. They could be anywhere on your body.
“These are gonna be small, itchy red welts — unusual bites,” he adds, noting that people should call in professionals if they see these warning signs. “This is not one that you’re going to want to tackle yourself,” Raupp says.
In spite of the distress bedbugs bring, Raupp says he’s still a fan.
“I find all bugs mysterious, wonderful. These ones I tend to find a little bit despicable. But they’re fascinating in their own regard.
“This business of feeding on other people — the ectoparasitic life — I think we all know some people that do that, don’t we now? And maybe bedbugs aren’t so awfully different than somebody we know,” he says. “So, there’s a little bit of us in them, perhaps.”
We can already thank illegals for Multi-drug-resistant-Tuberculosis, Whooping cough, Leprosy, and many other long lost diseases!
How many ways can they find to make us as third world as they are!?!?
@George L,
Yes, they have leper colonies in Arizona.
Lepers that crossed illegally in from Mexico.
The colonies are there to try to keep Leprocy from spreading.

March 24th, 2011 at 11:34 pm
No. Nothing in the article even suggests that.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 25th, 2011 at 11:34 pm
Yes, and the reappearance of tuberculosis and other disease as well.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 26th, 2011 at 9:34 pm
Yes, they are, they don’t bath as often as Americans do. I am not prejudice, but other countries do not shower daily ot twice a day, like we do, they go for weeks. So immigrant workers, take themselves and their crews from hotel to hotel, and guess what? they are spreading bugs. Also European travelers are the same way, they are not accustomed to showering daily, bugs, bugs, bugs.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 27th, 2011 at 9:35 pm
Yes. Just because the article doesn’t say this means NOTHING. EVERY loyal American knows how pro illegal alien invading border criminal the news media really is.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 28th, 2011 at 9:34 pm
The article suggests that American travelers to foreign countries picked them up and brought them back to the states.
But, some people feel the need to blame illegals for everything, in fact, the light bulb burnt out in my bedroom yesterday, and I am sure they are to blame somehow!
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 29th, 2011 at 9:33 pm
Look at it like this illegals from Mexico move around from one home to the next.99% of these homes are shared with 5-10 other families who all have came from other homes that were overcrowded with to many people living in them and these families are in and out homes so often. Where people come and go every week to every month.They tend to live in low rent districts where problems of bedbugs, lice are very common. When you have so many different people bedbugs become very common.Bear in mind a lot of illegals who paid money for their beds,sofa’s, etc,etc are not willing to throw away them as they see this as losing money on their investment.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 30th, 2011 at 9:33 pm
Wow – those darn illegal aliens – all of them or just the ones from Mexico or maybe it’s the African-Americans, or maybe it’s the Jews or maybe it’s the Arabs or maybe it’s the Koreans or Vietnamese. It is all those non-white folks sneaking into our country.
Our wonderful first world country where people who are in the middle class income bracket don’t have health care – and won’t even though Congress wasted a year created the Health Reform Act, that wonderful country where there is so much hatred that we are, on our own, becoming a third world country, our own country where our children grow up illiterate because parents are too busy to be involved – after all, they are chasing the American nightmare.
We are going to be our own undoing in this. We are creating this ourselves.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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March 31st, 2011 at 10:33 pm
I doubt many illegals use the hotels I use. Out of curiosity, has anyone here ever actually seen a leper?
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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April 2nd, 2011 at 2:33 am
No , we have Obamabam to thank for not securing the border .
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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April 3rd, 2011 at 6:33 am
What I’ve read is that we can thank the increasing frequency of bedbug infestations to the bedbugs getting resistant to the insecticides which have been used against them.
Nothing in the article indicates any particular group of people is responsible for it. I would highly recommend to learn to research facts, not just interpret everything in the light of what you want to hear…
by the way leprosy can these days be easily cured as long as the patient can afford the treatment which is a mix of antibiotics. I don’t believe there is a single leprosy colony in Arizona, unless you show credible proof it’s obviously made up.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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April 4th, 2011 at 10:34 am
Yes. Illegal aliens carry filthy diseases with them. They have no business being in the U.S.A.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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April 5th, 2011 at 3:33 pm
OH yeah, and Obama is the Anti-Christ Bush was the second coming of Jesus, oops looks like we missed him. Muslims are out to get you. Democrats are socialists who hate America. Reagan was God. History is not needed, misguided misinformed assumptions are the law of the land. And completely misinterpreting a written text or spoken address is totally the way to go. Don’t forget to blame Liberals for everything!!
/ SARCASM
Ironically speaking, you forgot to blame white Europeans for smallpox. And America for countless food borne illnesses such as E.Coli thanks to the failure to regulate our meat-packing plants.
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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April 6th, 2011 at 10:34 pm
Bed bug infestations have once again become epidemic in proportion..And yes I agree that the reason they are spreading is because when they are found people will not have their furniture,bedding ,clothing,etc treated by a qualified exterminator because of the cost and they will not have the items destroyed and because they cant afford to replace them.Those that can afford to get rid of the bed bugs and replace everything that the parasites infested.
Beg Bugs feed on people.You are their food supply..
People that accept living with bed bugs are normally at the bottom of the economic scale. Most Illegal aliens are at the in that category.
In an article in the Journal of the American Medical Assn., Dr. Reuben Granich, a lead investigator for the CDC commented on MDR-TB:
“Evidence of it has surfaced in 38 of 61 California health jurisdictions, and it could ‘threaten the efficacy of TB control efforts,’ Granich said. The infected were said to be four times as likely to die from the disease and twice as likely to transmit the disease to others … Reluctant to label the infected as ‘illegal’ or even ‘undocumented’ aliens, the report notes that of the 407 known cases of MDR-TB, 84% were ‘foreign-born’ patients, mainly from Mexico and the Philippines who’d been in the U.S. less than five years. The percentage of TB cases among the ‘foreign-born’ jumped from 29% in 1993 to 53% as of last year.”
Interesting facts about Leprosy In the USA
Leprosy, the contagious skin disease evoking thoughts of biblical and Medieval times, is now making its mark in the United States, and many believe the influx of illegal aliens is a main factor.
“Americans should be told that diseases long eradicated in this country tuberculosis, leprosy, polio, for example and other extremely contagious diseases have been linked directly to illegals,” Rep. J.D. Hayworth, R-Ariz., told the Business Journal of Phoenix. “For example, in 40 years, only 900 persons were afflicted by leprosy in the U.S.; in the past three years, more than 7,000 cases have been presented.”
“This emerging crisis exposes the upside-down thinking of federal immigration policy,” he continued. “While legal immigrants must undergo health screening prior to entering the U.S., illegal immigrants far more likely to be carrying contagious diseases are crawling under that safeguard and going undetected until they infect extraordinary numbers of American residents.”
The number of cases of leprosy, now known as Hansen’s disease, among immigrants to the U.S. has more than doubled since 2000, according to a news report from Columbia University.
While the overall figure is small compared to other countries, some researchers fear the trend could lead to the disease spreading to the U.S.-born population.
“It’s creeping into the U.S.,” Dr. William Levis, head of the New York Hansen’s Disease Clinic, told Columbia News Service. “This is a real phenomenon. It’s a public health threat. New York is endemic now, and nobody’s noticed.”
Levis thinks America could be on the verge of an epidemic.
“We just don’t know when these epidemics are going to occur,” he said. “But we’re on the cusp of it here, because we’re starting to see endemic cases that we didn’t see 25 years ago.”
According to Steve Pfeifer, head of statistics and epidemiology at the National Hansen’s Disease Program, only about two dozen new cases are found each year in U.S.-born patients, with that number remaining stable for decades.
But Pfeifer suggests many aliens are coming to the U.S. specifically to get treated for their skin condition, due to the short time between many immigrants’ entry to the U.S. and their diagnosis with leprosy.
“They’re coming to be treated because they get treatment free and probably get better treatment here,” he told Columbia. “Somebody down there diagnoses them and says, ‘Hey, you’ve got leprosy, and your best course of action is probably high-tailing to the U.S.’”
The fear is that since the disease remains contagious until treatment is commenced, a surge of diagnosed-but-untreated patients could mean a spread of leprosy into the population of those born in America.
Pfeifer said he had not issued an official report on the dangerous trend, fearing that anti-immigration groups would become vocal against centers providing free health care for illegals.
“A lot of our cases are imported,” said Dr. Terry Williams, who treats leprosy victims in Houston. “We see patients from everywhere – Africa, the Philippines, China, South America.”
Williams confirms that some of his patients came to the U.S. specifically for treatment, telling Columbia, “Certainly we do see some of that. We’ve had even a couple of patients from Cuba who were put on a boat by Castro just to get them out of the country – they made their way here through Mexico and Central America basically just to get treated. … We treat them; our job isn’t to be immigration police.”
VERY prone to mosquito bites for my entire life, what my mom used to do for me (it works!)
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