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Understanding a few facts about bed bugs can make a significant difference. In this guide, you’ll learn where they are found, how to identify them, and even if bed bugs can live in your hair.
An entomologist is sharing a new hack for how to use a hotel hair dryer to avoid bed bugs when you're traveling.
In cases of high infestations, bed bugs may also be found in places like drawer joints, curtain folds and under wallpaper.
It's bad enough having bed bugs in your mattress, but what if they've also taken up residence in your wooden furniture?
Bedbugs feed off human or animal blood. They're often found in places like the seams of your mattress or cracks in your bed frame. Can they live in your hair?
Bed bugs can be brought in your home through luggage, purses and more. They hide in mattresses, box springs and bed frames, among other places.
Learn home remedies and treatments to help get rid of bed bugs and speed up your recovery.
Although the two species look alike, tropical bed bugs have more hair on their legs, which allows them to climb out of many of the smooth-walled traps that are used to monitor homes.
Bed bugs have an intimate relationship with humankind, and our behaviors have as much to do with infestations as anything.
#1. Wet hair can result in a moldy mattress Going to bed with wet hair might seem like a harmless habit, but it could be causing serious harm to your mattress.
Worried about bed bugs in your hotel or rental house ruining your vacation? Here, an entomologist shares three ways to prevent bed bugs when traveling.
Here, we'll outline exactly what wet hair can do to your mattress, as well as offering some advice on how to limit the ill-effects. Why going to bed with wet hair is bad for you and your mattress 1.