Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is not a product, a spray schedule, or a buzzword—it is a structured decision-making process designed to prevent pest problems while reducing risk to people, food, property, and the environment. Integrated Pest Management, Then and Now breaks down what IPM really is, how it developed, and how it should be applied in modern commercial and food-handling environments.
Written for pest control technicians, restaurant owners, kitchen managers, maintenance supervisors, and commercial facility managers, this guide explains IPM as it was practiced in the past, how it has evolved under modern regulations, and how it works today in real-world settings. It moves beyond theory and focuses on practical application inside restaurants, food processing facilities, storage environments, and commercial buildings where pest pressure is constant and mistakes carry serious consequences.
The book walks readers through the six core principles of IPM—inspection, identification, monitoring, thresholds, control, and evaluation—showing how each step supports the next. Skipping steps leads to recurring infestations, wasted labor, and unnecessary chemical use. Following the process creates predictable, defensible pest management programs.
Special emphasis is placed on commercial kitchens and food-handling facilities, where zero-tolerance pests, health regulations, and customer perception demand precision. Detailed guidance is provided for managing German cockroaches, flies, stored-product insects, and rodents through sanitation, exclusion, monitoring, and targeted treatment—not routine spraying. The guide explains why treatment without source removal fails and how exterior conditions often drive interior infestations.
The book also explores the history of IPM in the United States, from its early roots as a response to overreliance on broad-spectrum pesticides to its adoption into federal policy, state training programs, and modern regulatory expectations. It clarifies how IPM principles are incorporated into licensing, inspections, and compliance—often without being fully understood or consistently applied.
Clear roles are defined for pest control professionals, management, and maintenance staff, emphasizing that successful IPM is a shared responsibility. Documentation, reporting, and accountability are addressed as essential components—not paperwork for its own sake, but tools that protect businesses, technicians, and public health.
Whether you are implementing IPM for the first time or refining an existing program, this guide provides a grounded, experience-based roadmap for managing pests intelligently instead of reactively. IPM is not about doing less—it is about doing better.