It has been reported to be the most common method of suicide in
North India. Deaths have also been reported in
Iran. In January 2017, four children died at a
trailer park in
Amarillo, Texas, after the pesticide was used under the home to kill rats. Several incidents of death in travelers in
Thailand and other parts of
Southeast Asia may have been caused by aluminum phosphide or
chlorpyrifos, an
organophosphate insecticide, used in an attempt to kill
bedbugs in hotels. On November 16 2019, 2 children and an adult were killed in
Timișoara,
Romania, after the residential complex they were living in had been improperly vented after fumigation with AlP. It was later found there were other cases in the country that could have been linked to the misuse of this chemical. In February 2020, aluminum phosphide poisoning resulted in one death and three serious injuries aboard a cargo ship traveling near France, as the result of a botched fumigation procedure. In December 2021, an 11-year old girl died in London and another child was seriously injured by
phosphine inhalation after a neighbour used illegally imported aluminum phosphide tablets in an attempt to remove a bedbug infestation in an apartment building. In November 2025 four members of a German family died and several guests got sick after they had been exposed to aluminium phosphide in a hotel in
Istanbul. The staff of a pest control company had used the poison to fight bedbugs in other rooms of the hotel and investigators suspected it to have spread through the ventilation system. In a study from Saudi Arabia, poisoning was most common during fumigation of households. ==References==