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How to kill bedbugs? Our UVC units kill bed bugs FAST!
You’ll have heard the news from France about an invasion of biting bed bugs that are probably making their way over here, hiding in holidaymakers’ suitcases and lurking in the fabric of train and aeroplane seating.
If you’ve ever been bitten by one you’ll know how disgusting it is. So what can you do to protect your business against the invasion, which is more or less inevitable given the constant stream of travellers between here and there? Read on to find out how to kill bedbugs fast and effectively.
First, what are bedbugs?
Bedbugs hide in bed frames, mattresses, bedding and clothing, inside furniture, behind picture frames, and anywhere else away from daylight. They tend to bite exposed skin while you’re asleep, leaving little spots of blood on your bedding from the bites and brown spots of bedbug poop. It’s revolting, and it’s very bad for business to have your visitors, guests, residents, staff or customers bitten.
The whys, wheres, and hows of the bedbug invasion
France has been forced to close seven schools so far because of bedbug invasions. As reported in The Guardian, they were found ‘at various levels’ in 17 institutions. And ten percent of French households are thought to have a bedbug issue, costing several hundred Euros a pop in pest control fees every time there’s an outbreak. Because it’s impossible to kill them all the traditional way, there’s always a risk they’ll be back.
The ‘plague’ of bedbugs currently affecting Paris and other French cities is raising PR worries about the 2024 Olympic Games. But in fact their numbers have been steadily increasing for several years, with a boom during the July and August holiday season when the bugs hitch a lift in people’s luggage. Every year there’s been an increase, and the annual increase is always bigger than the year before.
These days bedbugs are everywhere, right across Europe and beyond thanks to a combination of container ships, tourism, and the way we’ve dealt with bedbugs so far – which has helped worsen the situation in the long term.
Chemicals like DDT, now banned, made things worse by killing off the insects most susceptible to chemicals and leaving those with immunity behind. This means today’s bedbugs are often a lot more resistant than their ancestors. The decline in the bedbug-eating cockroach hasn’t helped, leaving the bugs free to do their thing.
Traditional ways of dealing with bedbugs don’t work well
The Eurostar is currently boosting its cleaning routine to try to stop the bugs travelling to the UK but it’s an impossible task. The bugs are tiny, they hide in very small spaces, and they’re likely to be well and truly here already.
If you think you have bedbugs at your business, they’ll be pretty hard to find because they hide so well. And that means it can be very difficult to get rid of them. A good pest control service might be your first thought, but they’ll probably struggle, too. And it can get horribly expensive. Luckily UVC light kills bedbugs fast and efficiently.
‘Remarkable evidence’
An independent research thesis from the USA, which has an ongoing bedbug problem, has examined the effectiveness of UVC light in killing bedbugs, and it has come up with some startlingly good results.
The report is called The Impact of Ultraviolet Light on Survival and Behavior of the Human Bed Bug, Cimex lectularius Linnaeus and it was undertaken by the undergraduate colleges of Ohio State University. As it says:
“Currently no individual control measure, chemical or otherwise, has proven to be one hundred percent effective in the removal of bed bugs from domestic structures. Alternative methods of control are needed to aid in a broader removal strategy. Ultraviolet light as a control tactic for arthropods is a new concept only now being explored.
UV light is known to damage DNA; however, its various effects on arthropods have not been well documented. This study examines the impact of ultraviolet light on bed bug survival and behavior, and is a first step in determining the potential of ultraviolet light as a control measure.
Two developmental stages of Cimex lectularius, the egg and the first nymphal instar, were exposed to ultraviolet light for periods of 1, 2, 5, or 10 sec at a distance of 4 cm. A dose response curve was created by calculating mortality following an interval of 2 weeks. Behavioral observations were also conducted to assess the effects of UV exposure on the hostseeking abilities of first instar nymphs.
The nymphs were exposed for periods of 5 or 10 sec then released to search for a human host from a distance of 34 cm. The success rates and search times were recorded. Results of both experiments indicate UV light negatively impacts bed bug survival and host-seeking abilities.”
Should you stick to traditional ways of killing bed bugs?
The report suggests it’s not much use reverting to old-school methods. As it says:
“Since pesticide applications are only partially effective in removing bed bugs from a structure, they are typically combined with other control methods such as heat or steam treatments (Bonnefoy, et al., 2008). Other physical controls such as vacuuming or laundering items at high temperatures are also common strategies (Krinsky, 2009).
“Bed bug removal is a complicated and expensive process that almost always requires multiple treatments to ensure complete eradication from a structure (Potter, 2008). As no single tactic is one hundred percent effective in eliminating infestations on its own, a combination of control methods must be used in an Integrated Pest Management approach (Bonnefoy et al., 2008)”
Our UVC portable 600w unit destroys bed bugs
The fact UVC is so effective in bedbug control is great news when removal by physical or chemical means is a challenge and sprays or fogging simply don't work. UVC blasts them dead, a reliable solution to bedbug infestations.
The evidence is quite remarkable; just ten seconds of exposure has a profound impact on the creatures, giving the team a 95% treatment mortality rate on bedbug eggs, which proved to be the insects’ most vulnerable stage.
Our high intensity 600w portable UVC disinfection units are totally devastating for bedbugs, applying the ideal Time, Intensity and Distance to do a brilliant job.
Save time, save money, save your business – This is how to kill bedbugs
If you’re worried about bedbugs getting into your hotel, the trains your network runs, your care home, hospital, clinic, theatre, cinema or school, you need UVC to kill bedbugs and their eggs, and damage any survivors so badly they struggle to find someone to bite.
We’ll leave the final word to the study, which concludes:
“This project strongly suggests that UV light is effective, both in killing bed bugs, and in impairing their ability to reach a host.”
If you’d like to know more about the tech or the study, or talk about the potential of our low-cost, low running cost, high efficiency UVC disinfection units with an expert,
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