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Ten Things You Should Know About Mold
- Exposure to elevated
levels of molds can cause serious health problems, such as respiratory
problems and sinus problems, cold and flu-like symptoms, headaches, fatigue,
trouble concentrating, and memory loss. Those most susceptible include
young children, the elderly, those with compromised immune systems, and
other sensitive individuals.
- There are many molds
that have the potential to cause health problems including Alternaria,
Aspergillus, Chaetomium, Cladosporium, Fusarium, Penicillin, and
Stachybotrys. (Just because you can’t pronounce it doesn’t mean it
can’t harm you.)
- Mold spores can cause
health problems even if the spores are dead.
- Mold requires an
organic food source, such as cloth, sheetrock, or wood, and a moisture
source to grow. Mold can begin to grow if any organic material remains wet
for more than 48 hours. The way to control mold growth indoors is to
control moisture indoors.
- Mold spores are very
common outdoors and there is no practical way to eliminate all mold spores
indoors.
- Mold can grow
undetected inside wall spaces, under carpet, and inside HVAC systems.
- Mold growth can often
be the visible sign of a structural defect that allows moisture to intrude
into a building.
- When doing mold
abatement, it is first necessary to find and eliminate the moisture
source.
- Cleanup of large areas
of mold growth can cause airborne levels of spores to increase up to 10,000
times that of background levels resulting in acute exposure to those doing
the cleanup if personal protective equipment is not worn.
- The best way to abate
mold growth indoors is to remove the impacted materials. Cleaning the
surface of a material with mold growth may not always kill the mold,
especially if the mold is growing on porous materials like sheetrock or
wood.
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