Dr. Mike Merchant, Agrilife Entomology Specialist in Dallas, wrote the post below on the benefits of cockroach control for his blog,
. It's full of great information!
Benefits of cockroach control
Before starting graduate school in entomology I worked as
a pest control technician out of college. My accounts included a sprawling,
multi-story public housing complex in Seattle, WA. These visits were
frustrating to me, because of the difficulty (impossibility) of putting much of
a dent in the well entrenched German cockroach population that scurried back
and forth among these apartments.
One of my visits, however, was the home of a single mom.
It was a short encounter, and I'm not sure I ever saw her again; but I'll never
forget the mother's gratitude for my efforts to battle the cockroaches plaguing
her and her daughter. The woman's apartment, unlike many in the
community, was uncluttered and very clean. It was obvious she was doing her
part to keep cockroaches at bay, something that made my job a lot easier and
more effective. Despite the feeling that I wasn't putting much of a dent in the
overall cockroach problem in those apartments, I went home that
night feeling a little better about my job in pest control.
Improved technology
Two major changes have occurred in cockroach control since
the early 1980s. First, we've learned a lot more about the health impacts
of cockroaches over the past 25 years. Besides being unsanitary and capable of
spreading disease pathogens, we now have solid evidence to show that
cockroaches are
major contributors to asthma morbidity, especially among children
living in infested homes. Indeed, the feces and shed exoskeletons of
cockroaches have proved to be among the most important indoor asthma causes we
know of. Children who grow up in cockroach infested apartments have
higher rates of asthma, more missed school days, and more doctor visits than do
their more affluent classmates from cockroach-free homes.
Second, with the discovery of effective baits, we have
much better tools for cockroach control today. The insecticides available to me
in 1980 were mostly residual sprays and dusts that had to be applied directly
to cockroach hiding places. If counter-tops were not cleared and covered,
or cupboards not emptied before I arrived, there was little I could safely do
with my Ficam®, diazinon and malathion sprays and dusts. In addition,
many of these sprays were repellent to cockroaches, something that I learned
later in grad school greatly reduces their effectiveness against
insecticide-avoiding cockroaches.
Today pest management professionals and even homeowners
have access to technologies that are safer and vastly superior to the old
insecticides. Containerized and gel baits, in particular, have
revolutionized our industry's ability to manage cockroaches. Although
sanitation is still important for cockroach IPM, baits have shown an ability to
suppress cockroach numbers even in cluttered and poorly maintained living
quarters.
A number of studies have shown over the past 20 years that
cockroach control and sanitation efforts could significantly reduce the
quantity of cockroach allergens in apartments. Indeed, the
National Asthma
Education and Prevention Program recommends reducing cockroach
exposure as a critical step to take in reducing asthma risk.
Research news
A
new study in the
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology out this week is the
first to show that cockroach baiting by itself can result in measurable
improvements in the health of children. The researchers looked at the
apartments of 102 children (aged 5-17 years), all of whose homes had some level
of cockroach infestation. Half of the children were assigned to homes
that would be treated by researchers with cockroach baits, and half of the
homes were left untreated by researchers. All of the homes were sampled
for cockroaches using Victor® Roach Pheromone Traps, and health indicators were
measured for all the children (such as number of school days missed, medication
used, days of wheezing, number of nights where children woke up, etc.).
Treatment of homes consisted of placing either Maxforce®
FC Magnum, or Advion® cockroach bait gels in areas with evidence of active
cockroach infestation. Those who put out the bait were not trained PMPs,
but were research staffers instructed to place baits in the back corners of
kitchen cabinets, behind kitchen appliances, and inside bathroom vanities.
No other control methods were used.
The median cockroach numbers were significantly lower in
treated homes vs. untreated. By the end of the study none of the baited homes
had evidence of cockroach activity, compared to a 20% infestation rate of the
untreated homes.
Interesting to me was that after the study began cockroach
numbers in the untreated homes went from 100% infested to only 20% infested.
The authors of the study attributed the drop in untreated homes to
"study effects". People whose homes did not get treated, but
were being monitored for cockroaches, took extra pains to clean up before the
research team arrived, and they conducted additional cockroach control on their
own, apart from insecticide baits applied by the researchers. This lead to an
almost 85% reduction in trapped cockroach numbers in the control homes.
So it's even more remarkable that, despite the cockroach
reductions in homes not receiving bait treatment, researchers still noted
significantly better cockroach suppression with bait-treated homes and
significant improvements in children's health. In treated homes, for
example, children had 47 fewer days a year with asthma symptoms compared to
homes that were not treated with baits. Children in treated homes also had
improved lung function and significantly fewer doctor visits compared to
untreated homes, despite the relatively small sample size and relatively low
cockroach levels in untreated homes.
These results should be carefully noted by the pest
control industry. With readily available, high-quality cockroach baits,
and relatively easily taught skills, pest control technicians today can make a
significant impact on the health and well-being of customers. In fact, I'm sure
that the benefits of a highly skilled technician applying baits would accrue
even faster and be more significant compared to untrained applicators.
When I consider how far cockroach control has come since
my days with a B&G sprayer, these results are truly amazing.
I've said it before, and will say it again: the work you do
as a PMP is very important. Cockroach management in multifamily housing
may not be very glamorous, but few other accounts provide the opportunity to
better your customers' lives more. And that's something that should make
you feel even better when you go home at night.
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