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Due to battling
for a year and a half with my insurance company, we have been out of our
mold-infested home due to mold-related illness. We have done all of the
removal ourselves using the NYC guidelines. Is there a post-remediation
clearance test we can do ourselves to test the spore count in the air?
Testing in our home is $1200, and we can’t afford that. Do you have any
recommendations?-Mary
Because of the
continual exposure of non-living areas such as crawlspaces, attics, and
garages to the outdoor environment, is clearance testing worthwhile? If
so, why?-Chad, Virginia
In response to the first question
above, there are no inexpensive tests that homeowners can do themselves
to determine the effectiveness of a remediation. As I will explain
below, clearance testing even when conducted by professionals may in
many cases be not much better.
Chad poses a very interesting question,
one that is seldom if ever addressed by professionals—that is, how
worthwhile is clearance testing?
Clearance testing is valuable in that
it provides at least some information on the effectiveness of a
remediation. If the clearance results are but a fraction (i.e.) 5% of
pre-remediation test results, then the remediation appears to have been
quite successful. If Stachybotrys spores are airborne even after
remediation, additional cleaning steps should be implemented. I
recommend two 0 Stachybotrys slide samples post-remediation to
achieve clearance on this species.
Some homeowners seem to think that
clearance implies that after remediation, there such be 0 mold. That is
unattainable for a variety of reasons. One of these is that because
many mold spores are very small, it is virtually impossible to collect
and remove every last one. In addition, the outdoor environment can and
is an important source of mold in indoor spaces, particularly those
buildings/dwellings that open windows for ventilation.
Outdoor spore counts in the summer and
fall can be enormously high. I have measured outdoor mold
concentrations here in the Midwest that on both volumetric culture plate
and total mold spore methods are in the tens of thousands range. Those
spores do come indoors through open windows and doors and affect indoor
concentrations for months. Though crawlspaces, attics and garages are
often open to the outdoor environment, entry of outdoor spores through
these building areas is minor compared to having windows open during
warm/moderate weather conditions.
Then there is the question of
undercounts. In my position, I often get to see the test results of
other professionals and the laboratories that support them. I continue
to be amazed at the very low spore count numbers that are reported. I
have been in houses that other professionals have tested. My counts are
often several times to an order of magnitude higher. My volumetric
plate counts are at times higher than total mold spore concentrations
reported by others. This may be due to chance or it may be due to the
fact that counts commonly reported are very conservative and may indeed
be undercounts.
How good is clearance testing if the airborne mold
counts are very low because of undercounts? Not much better than if one
does the clearance testing one’s self with a not very reliable
technique?
January 23, 2004
Indoor Environmental Quality (2000), Thad Godish Ph.D., C.I.H
Direct E-mail
00tjgodish@bsu.edu
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