Is air
testing necessary to determine whether one has a mold problem or not?-Anonymous
The answer is of course no. If one
inspects a building and visibly detects mold growth on a building
surface, a mold problem exists that in most cases will require some
form of remediation. This may vary from the very minor (i.e. a
small dime-sized growth) to the widespread infestation of timbers in
a crawlspace, basement, wall, or attic. The simple presence of a
mold infested surface should be enough to trigger a remediation
effort whose scale will depend on the scale of infestation.
Why remediate mold?
Two reasons: (1) mold growth can cause structural damage, (2) a
significant mold infestation can result in the release of spores and
mold fragments that can cause respiratory health problems which
include chronic allergic rhinitis, asthma, sinusitis,
non-immunological inflammation of the respiratory system, lung
infection in immune-compromised individuals, etc.
Should not airborne
mold testing be conducted to determine whether occupants are exposed
, the degree they may be exposed, and the organisms involved in the
exposure?
The best reason for conducting
airborne mold testing is to establish the nature of exposure that
occupants are potentially subject to in a building environment.
This includes levels of potential exposures as well as the kinds of
mold organisms present. Such information is valuable when one or
more occupants are experiencing respiratory health problems,
particularly when the respiratory health concern is asthma or
recurring sinusitis. I use such air testing information in advising
clients and in some cases their physicians.
Air testing for mold, of course,
needs to be done right. A single spore trap sample collected
indoors with a second outdoors is not enough. I typically conduct
airborne mold sampling using both culturable and spore trap
methods. Each method has advantages and limitations. Collecting
airborne mold samples using both methods allows one to better
interpret test data and provide clients with advice that will allow
for informed decision-making relative to health concerns and the
need and nature of remediation efforts.
Most (if not all) mold consultants
conduct air testing. Why? The answer is that in most
cases that is what the client wants and, of course, it is a service
that the consultant normally provides.
Air testing is absolutely essential
should a “mold problem” be subject to litigation, particularly if
personal injury is alleged. In such cases, one has to show evidence
that exposure is likely to have occurred as a result of the presence
of infested materials/surfaces. A digital image or a tape lift
sample is evidence of mold growth. It is not by itself sufficient
to establish a causal link with alleged health effects.
Since a consultant never knows
whether a building investigation is going to result in a lawsuit, it
is good practice to conduct all indoor mold investigations under the
assumption that a legal action may be forthcoming. That means one
should in almost all cases conduct air testing for mold.
October 28, 2005