Mold Testing FAQ Page
What are the important facts to know about your indoor mold
spore count results?
1) Nature contains thousands of different types of molds
in forests, wetlands, lawns, gardens, and farms. These molds
produce spores, which are microscopic "seeds" that are
constantly blowing in the wind. Outdoor airborne mold spores
are lowest during a "hard-freeze" winter and highest during a
warm, damp summer climate. Conclusion: Natural outdoor mold
spore counts vary from season to season and region to region.
The film you put outside during the testing period will
capture a sample of the natural background environmental spore
count, for that hour, on that day. This will establish the
background reference amount for your mold testing.
2) When the wind blows, these natural environmental
mold spores blow into and around buildings through windows,
doors and drafty openings.
3) Buildings with open doors and windows and window
fans will have the highest level of "blow in" mold spores.
4) Buildings which are tightly built, with windows and
doors kept closed and air conditioned will have the lowest
level of "blow in" mold spores.
5) Normal "blow in" mold spores which are not cleaned
up by dusting, vacuuming or washing, remain inside as your
"normal resident" mold spore count.
6) "Resident" mold spores settle onto surfaces and mix
in with the other house dust. "Resident" mold spores will
gradually build up on the most difficult to clean or
infrequently cleaned surfaces, such as rugs, books on shelves,
cloth furniture, drapes and blinds. These resident spores are
dormant. They are not considered contamination.
7) Mold contamination begins to occur inside when the
dormant "resident" mold spores inside a building become wet
through a leak, flood or condensation and begin to grow
within the building. It is unacceptable to have mold
growing in occupied buildings since it will destroy building
materials and may cause chronic negative health effects which
is why regular mold testing is important.
8) Visible Mold Contamination. Surface Mold is usually
recognizable as blotches or a fuzzy or powdery-looking coating
in black, gray-green or pink colors growing on a damp surface.
It smears when touched and often stains the surface. After
cleaning, it usually grows back. It is usually found on the
walls where rain water has leaked in or on a wall with leaky
plumbing or on walls and furniture which have been wetted by
flooding or high humidity.
9) Hidden Mold Contamination. Hidden mold is growing in
walls, under rugs, behind wallpaper, under linoleum, under
floorboards, in the back of closets, on the back side of
ceiling tiles, in damp basements, crawl spaces, and attics,
etc. You can’t see it or often smell it. The spores get blown
into the rooms by drafts through walls, ceilings, windows,
floors, trim spaces or cracks, or walking on the rugs and
floors, etc. Mold testing is critical for detecting hidden
mold.
10) "Normal" Indoor Mold Spore Levels. Scientists have
not yet been able to set a simple standard or formula for how
much indoor airborne mold is normal, due to the "blow-in"
effect, because it varies based on every building's fresh air
exchange, cleaning practices, air filters, climate, season and
locale.
Scientists and health officials agree that naturally occurring
levels of environmental mold spores are not a threat to a
normally healthy person. However, high levels of naturally
occurring environmental mold spores may cause negative
reactions in persons with allergies, asthma and other immune
system disorders.
11) What is Abnormal? -- It is abnormal to have any source
of mold growing inside an occupied building! Since all
mold colonies eventually release spores into the air, they
will eventually increase the mold spore count in nearby rooms
or areas. Mold almost never grows alone as a single type.
There are usually several different types of mold growing on a
wet contaminated area.
When mold grows indoors, it is trapped and concentrates
abnormally high mixtures of the spores, off-gases and chemical
irritants which can only provide harm to your health, such as
irritation to the eyes, nose, throat and lungs, stomach and in
some rare cases, dangerous toxic effects - even to non
allergic individuals. Mold testing will detect these indoor
sources.
12) Conclusion. Once you find any source of growing
mold, don’t worry about identifying their names - It’s an
expensive waste of time unless you’re going to court! Just
clean all of it up - safely (For instruction on how to
do this use the MoldCheck™ Mold Testing Kits
Clean Up Guide).
13) Taking Action. Once you have found a source of mold
growing within an occupied building, use the
Mold Clean Up Guide to make a
careful plan to clean it up.
What do I do when I get my mold spore count results?
Thank you for using our MoldCheck™ Mold Test Kits. This
mold testing kit is designed as a 3-part management kit to
help you detect, track down and clean up excessive levels of
indoor mold spores caused by contamination.
The three parts of the mold test kits are:
1) Mold Spore Detection Films
2) The Building
Detective GuideTM and
3) The Clean Up GuideTM
Understanding Your Mold Testing Results
Your mold testing results give you clues to track down sources
of mold contamination growing indoors. Every building has some
level of normal "resident" blown-in mold spores. The way to
find out if an indoor source of mold contamination is
increasing your spore count is: A) to locate the rooms with
the highest spore counts, and; B) then conduct a detailed
search for the possible hidden source in high spore count
rooms, using The Building
Detective GuideTM.
Use these clues and your
Building Detective GuideTM to search for
sources of growing mold.
Search Clue #1: Take your Guide and go to the
rooms with the highest spore counts.
Search Clue #2: Inspect the rooms or areas which have
the highest mold spore counts.
Search Clue #3: Inspect all rooms or areas which have a
mold spore count that is more than 20-30 colony counts.
Search Clue #4: Search areas or rooms which make anyone
sneeze, itch, get a runny nose, itchy eyes or cough.
Search Clue #5: Search areas that smell musty or have
an unexplained odd or stuffy odor.
Read the Important Facts about Indoor Mold (above). The
MoldCheck™ Mold Test Kits should help you find the hidden
source of mold if you have one inside your building.
If you have any questions, give us a call or drop us an e-mail
at
info@homehealthscience.com.
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