This thought has been nagging at me for quite some time. Not the herpes connection, but how they say bed bugs are harmess.
Huh! My arse, me thinks. One thing I have learned is that the available information prior to the internet was lame and research was fairly inconclusive. Now, THANKS to the internet, things will surely step up. No emperor will want anyone to see him naked.
I realize this is a stretch, but I intend to do further research, possibly linking bed bugs to herpes transmission. Don't ask me why, because I don't know. Just a hunch I think worth following. What the hey.
The bottom link is telling, I believe. Could have been manipulated for bio-warfare just like any other insect. How can they say it's an unlikely transmitter when it carries like, 60 some odd pathogens, and sticks it's sucker into our blood?
While there might be no herpes connection, I certainly believe there is definitely a disease transfer connection.
Sleep tight 
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Bedbugs
Bed Bugs • Natural Cures For
What are Bed Bugs?
In search of warm-bloodied creatures for their supply of food, bed bugs started out in the world attacking nest-bound critters, but have quickly learned how to adapt to human households. When a bed bug first hatches, they are about the size of a poppy seed. An adult measures around ¼ of an inch in length, which is oval in shape with a flattened appearance from top to bottom. At first, bed bugs are nearly white in color (right after molting) and become light tan, deep brown, or burnt orange when mature. The shade of their body color comes as a result of digesting meals of blood.
SpringerLink - Journal Article
Supernumerary chromosomes in the human bed bug, Cimex lectularius Linn.
http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/54/5/1225.pdf
Supernumerary definition
Bedbug - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Disease transmission
Bedbugs seem to possess all of the necessary prerequisites for being capable of passing diseases from one host to another, but there have been no known cases of bed bugs passing disease from host to host. There are at least twenty-seven known pathogens (some estimates are as high as forty-one) that are capable of living inside a bed bug or on its mouthparts. Extensive testing has been done in laboratory settings that also conclude that bed bugs are unlikely to pass disease from one person to another.[9]
Therefore bedbugs are less dangerous than some more common insects such as the flea. However, transmission of Chagas disease or hepatitis B might be possible in appropriate settings.[10]