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The city's tourism agency, NYC & Company, said it has not seen mass cancellations because of bedbug fears. But officials said some New York hotels, museums and other attractions that depend on tourists have told the administration they are concerned the bedbug rumors will scare travelers away. Tourism officials are keeping an eye on the situation, and are trying to decide how to address the public relations side of it. New Yorkers themselves are feeling more anxious about regular activities like shopping, seeing movies and even just going to work, as bedbug reports have spread to office buildings and schools. "I have definitely had people talking about it more, checking more for signs of bedbugs
-- it's on people's minds and changing the way they live their lives," said Lisa Tischler, a Manhattan psychologist who treats anxiety disorders. "People are really taking it seriously, and there are people who are out of control about it." The online travel site TripAdvisor, where travelers post reviews and ask questions of other tourists, said it has seen a 12 percent increase in New York City posts referencing bedbugs. The site compared the first eight months of 2010 with the same period the previous year.
Dan Telfer recently traveled to New York City from Chicago and said he was overcome with anxiety about encountering bedbugs. But the standup comedian forged ahead with the trip after obsessively checking online hotel reviews and finding a place to stay that appeared to be bedbug-free. "I was acutely aware of all the stories I'd read, and that this bug that everyone thought was almost extinct was taking over the city," he said. "But you can't cancel. Life has to move on
-- there's no reason to cancel something potentially good or fun because of an anxiety." City officials and experts say it is difficult to fully measure the extent of the problem, partly because of bedbug stigma and the lack of solid data about confirmed infestations. For the first time, the city health department included a question about bedbugs on its annual community health survey. In 2009, it found, more than 6 percent of New Yorkers
-- one in 15 adults -- said they had battled the pests in the past year. Until the AP reported those results earlier this year, data had been limited to government statistics on bedbug complaints and private pest control company surveys.
[Associated
Press;
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