Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

What’s the Buzz? Bug Week is Here, June 10-17

Image of Bug Week is June 10-17. From fun activities at the Bugapalooza kick-off event to education for the service member and their families about diseases transmitted by bugs, we’ve got you covered. (Credit: Nicholas Roeder, DHA). Bug Week is June 10-17. From fun activities at the Bugapalooza kick-off event to education for the service member and their families about diseases transmitted by bugs, we’ve got you covered. (Credit: Nicholas Roeder, DHA)

Buzz. Buzz. Swwwwaaaaaarm. SPLAT! These familiar sounds are a reminder that summer—and even more bugs—will arrive soon.

To educate and inform the military community about illnesses transmitted by bugs and how to prevent bug bites at home or while deployed, the Military Health System is holding Bug Week, June 10-17. The week will also demonstrate the good things bugs can do for us.

To kick off Bug Week, the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Maryland, is hosting Bugapalooza, a free, family-friendly event 10 a.m.-noon, June 10, rain or shine.

Bugapalooza Activities

Entomologists from the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research will host a show-and-tell where they will display insects and other arthropods. The display is intended to educate visitors on the differences between insects and other arthropods; the importance of beneficial insects; the problems many insects cause to humans, animals, crops, and the environment; and how to protect yourself from harmful insect bites and diseases.

“Some bugs actually provide us with health benefits, and our activities will highlight common prevention practices useful for the military and the public, all during an enjoyable, family-friendly event,” said Andrea Schierkolk, the museum’s public programs manager.

U.S. Army Capt. David Denlinger, an entomologist (bug expert) at the Defense Health Agency, will showcase a display of preserved insect specimens to show the diversity (and awesome-ness) of insects. He’ll also describe what entomology is, a variety of career paths, and why insects are important.

Maria Gonzalez-Morales, an entomologist with the Defense Center for Public Health-Aberdeen, will host the “Unwelcome Bugs” station, sharing that although most insects have great benefits, such as the production of honey and silk, others pose serious risks to human and animal health. Visitors will be able to observe a live colony of bedbugs, a cockroach feeding station, and other eye-catching collections.

Gonzalez-Morales, an expert in medical and veterinary insects, is eager to answer any questions about bedbugs, cockroaches, and mosquitoes, and the diseases associated with them, such as malaria, Zika, chikungunya, dengue, and many others, she said.

U.S. Army Lt. Col. Lewis “Scotty” Long, an assistant professor in the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences’ department of preventive medicine and biostatistics, will bring some friendly Madagascar hissing cockroaches, passalid beetles, and some pinned specimens. He will be happy to answer questions and describe how some insects play important roles in maintaining the health of our ecosystem.

Bugs, Fake Bites, and a Rapper

Brian Spatola, the museum’s anatomical curator, will display his personal colony of dermestid beetles, sometimes referred to as nature’s forensic scientists. These beetles eat flesh from decomposing organisms and animals down to the bone. They can be useful to scientists who may use them to speed up the process of decomposition to aid in postmortem investigations or for anatomical preparations.

Medical illustrators from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences’ Val G. Hemming Simulation Center will create special effects makeup of injuries from insect bites and associated skin issues because of vector-borne diseases, and apply them to visitors’ skin to resemble what different insect and tick bites may look like.

VVisitors can also expect to watch a performance from Fairfax County’s “MC BUGG-Z,” an insect biologist who raps about bugs.

A fact-filled family guide, stickers, coloring books, and tattoos will be distributed and are available for download on the Bugapalooza web page.

Get in on the Buzz

The goal of Bug Week is to educate beneficiaries on the prevention and treatment of bug-borne illnesses, as well as how some bugs can have a positive effect on their health.

To see what all the buzz is about, visit www.health.mil/BugWeek to:

  • Learn fun facts and how you can prevent yourself from bugs with TRICARE on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.
  • Get the latest news, videos and information from the MHS about bugs and bug-borne illnesses on Facebook.
  • See how the Defense Health Agency is supporting readiness and tackling bug-borne illnesses on LinkedIn and Twitter.

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Mar 8, 2024

Navy Entomology Center for Excellence Aids in Hunt for Invasive Mosquito Species Spreading at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, of Navy Entomology Center of Excellence, and U.S. Army Capt. Mark Kartzinel, of Army Public Health Command East, select sites for mosquito surveillance, a form of surveillance where a container of water is used to collect eggs from mosquitoes, at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, on Jan. 14, 2024. (Photo by James Butler/U.S. Navy)

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, a medical entomologist with the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence in Jacksonville, Florida, traveled to Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in support of Naval Hospital Guantanamo Bay Preventive Medicine, Joint Task Force Guantanamo, and U.S. Army Public Health Command East, to provide mission-critical entomological training ...

Article Around MHS
Jul 13, 2023

Entomologist Augments Warfighter Research Across Indo Pacific Region

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, a medical entomologist at the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence, poses for a photo with Malaysian commissioned and noncommissioned officers, Malaysian public health officials, and researchers from the University of Malaysia Sabah during their training in Johor Bahru, Malaysia on Feb. 9. (Photo: U.S. Navy Lt. Nicholas Johnston)

Naval Medical Research Unit 2 was established during World War II in Guam to conduct applied research in support of force health protection and has operated intermittently since 1955. Currently, NAMRU-2 is located in Singapore and acts as the center of a hub-and-spoke research model in multiple southeastern Asian countries such as Vietnam, Thailand, ...

Article
Jun 23, 2023

Medical Countermeasures for Insect-Borne Diseases: Q&A with Experts

A female Aedes aegypti mosquito

Countermeasures for vector-borne diseases are often offered in the military when a service member is deployed to certain parts of the world. These types of countermeasures were developed to protect from infections spread by insects, rodents, and other animals. Insect-borne diseases, such as yellow fever, tick-borne encephalitis, Japanese encephalitis, ...

Video
Jun 20, 2023

Friday Facts: Bug Week

DHA Seal

It’s Bug Week and U.S. Army Lt. Col. (Dr.) Elizabeth Markelz and U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. (Dr.) Alice Barsoumian are back with a new episode of Friday Facts to provide tips for avoiding insect-borne diseases.

Article Around MHS
Jun 13, 2023

Bug Awareness Week: Small Bugs Pack a Pathogenic Punch

Ehrlichiosis is the general name used to describe diseases caused by the bacteria Ehrlichia chaffeensis, E. ewingii, or E. muris eauclairensis in the United States. These bacteria are spread to people primarily through the bite of infected ticks including the lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) and the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis).

According to the DHA, everyone is vulnerable to diseases spread by infected insects such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas, also called vectors. Find out how you and you family can learn more about these pest as part of DHA's Bug Week celebration. And also get some great travel tips to keep your summer vacation pest-free.

Article Around MHS
Jun 13, 2023

MilTICK Study Finds Use of Permethrin-Treated Uniforms Can Reduce Tick-Borne Illness Risk

According to a DCPH-A fact sheet, the DOD Insect Repellent System is a safe and proven method to reduce disease and annoyance associated with insects.

A recent study conducted by biologists who manage the Department of Defense Military Tick Identification/Infection Confirmation Kit, or MilTICK, program, found that ticks submitted to the program by service members wearing permethrin-treated uniforms were significantly less likely to have become engorged.

Photo
Jun 10, 2023

Bug Week

Bug Week

Hundreds of area residents attended Bugapalooza at the Defense Health Agency’s National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Maryland on Sat., June 10, 2023. The family-friendly event featured displays of insects, hand-on opportunities to interact with a variety of bugs, and performances by insect biologist Andy Lima (aka “MC Bugg-Z”) from ...

Photo
Jun 10, 2023

Bugapalooza

Bugapalooza

Hundreds of area residents attended Bugapalooza at the Defense Health Agency’s National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Maryland on Sat., June 10, 2023. The family-friendly event featured displays of insects, hand-on opportunities to interact with a variety of bugs, and performances by insect biologist Andy Lima (aka “MC Bugg-Z”) from ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: September 06, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery