I am a mold
consultant and use Air-O-Cell cassettes to collect air samples. I
then send them to a laboratory to conduct mold counts. The
laboratory I use charges $35/sample and reports that they count 100%
of the sample trace. Some laboratories charge as little as
$25/sample; others as high as $60/sample. They count only about 25%
of the sample. Does the analysis cost and percent of sample trace
counted make any difference in accuracy and the reliability of the
results that I receive?-Anon.
I have surveyed a number of
commercial laboratories that provide mold spore sampling services.
They vary from a low of $20/sample to a high of $60/sample. Most
are somewhere in between (i.e. $30-40/sample). In almost any
service that we use, cost and the apparent reputation of the
provider are important factors in which provider we use. We hope
that those charge less do as good (or better) of a job as those who
charge more. That, of course, is a leap of faith and unless we get
burned by our choice, we generally do not know whether we are
getting what we hope we are paying for.
In the matter of mold test results
reported by commercial laboratories, a recent study we conducted
showed a very strong correlation between analyses charges of
laboratories and count values reported. Those laboratories that
charged $50-60 per sample typically reported the highest count
values for samples collected in the same location and the same
time. This relationship can be seen in the following graph.
These results are based on six
individual sample collections sent to 10 different laboratories.
Based on comparisons to counts that this investigator conducted,
those laboratories which had the highest cost/fee per sample had the
more accurate and thus more reliable test results.
Increasing the percent of sample
counted does not increase the accuracy of a count. It can increase
the likelihood that mold types that are present in low numbers can
be detected and theoretically decrease count variability. Doing a
100% scan for large spore species such as Stachybotrys,
Chaetomium, Cladosporium herbarum, Alternaria, Pithymyces, Epicoccum,
etc. at 400 or 600X magnification makes sense. This is done by most
laboratories including those that report counts as being based on
20-30% of the total sample trace.
Conducting and reporting counts
based on 100% of the deposition trace may have its downsides. It
should in theory increase the amount of time that an analyst takes
to do a count and thus reduces the analyst’s productivity and thus
increases a laboratory’s cost. There is no indication that this is
the case that is counts may simply be conducted more rapidly and
less carefully. Based on my own experience, a good count on 5% of
the deposition area generally takes 15-20 minutes. In a number of
commercial laboratories, a 30-100% count at 600X generally takes
about 7-10 minutes. At that rate, the potential for an undercount is
high.
Getting back to cost, let me share
with you an experience that we had with one of the very low cost
high volume laboratories (used by many home inspectors, etc.). We
sent them lots of two samples at three different times. Of six
samples five were miscalculated. Once the values were recalculated,
reported count concentrations were twice as high as those initially
reported.
“caveat
emptor”
October 7, 2005