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http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_13397.cfm
Flooding, After the Deluge, and the Politics of Toxic Mold
By Ritt Goldstein
Common Dreams, July 5, 2008
For days now, a swollen Mississippi River has menacingly roamed far from
its banks, devouring large swatches of picturesque river towns and some of
the Midwest's best farmlands. While countless news organizations chronicle
both the courage of those fighting 'Big Muddy's' assault and the anguish
of those wounded by it, another battle is about to begin. This battle will
go all but unseen, for the struggle will be one of individual households
against mold, mold that is both toxic and dangerous, though there are
those who insist otherwise.
With an estimated 11 million people and nine Midwestern states impacted by
the floods, the severe weather preceding them, or both, toxic mold
questions have assumed new significance. A reading of the US Environmental
Protection Agency's (EPA) mold concerns quickly helps one appreciate why.
According to an EPA website last updated April 30th: "Many symptoms and
human health effects attributed to inhalation of mycotoxins have been
reported including: mucous membrane irritation, skin rash, nausea, immune
system suppression, acute or chronic liver damage, acute or chronic
central nervous system damage, endocrine effects, and cancer." The EPA
added, "it is clearly prudent to avoid exposure to molds and mycotoxins,"
and so performed an exercise in what should be obvious, but sometimes
apparently is not.
Posing a dilemma for flood victims, some of those within the medical
community have strongly downplayed toxic mold's dangers. One highly
circulated pronouncement - in a text specifically aimed at flood victims -
reassured: "Although molds release natural toxins, called mycotoxins,
these don't cause problems to people who live in moldy houses because the
toxins don't diffuse into the air. The only way to be exposed to them is
to swallow them." But there seems to be a problem with this.
Published research exists which directly contradicts such statements, with
even the EPA's just cited warning specifically mentioning the "inhalation
of mycotoxins." It's been repeatedly found that mycotoxins can be
airborne, inhaled, and are dangerous, with research also indicating that
mold can pose dangers to "immunocompetent," healthy, individuals.
In 2004 a study conducted by scientists with the Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,
is believed to be the first which revealed that "mycotoxins can become
airborne." The study, published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
concluded by noting the work "may have important implications for indoor
air quality assessment."
Another landmark 2004 study, titled "Adverse Health Effects of Indoor
Molds," compiled by researchers from leading institutions including
Harvard University and the University of Illinois at Chicago, concluded
that exposure to high levels of mold can induce "injury to and dysfunction
of multiple organs and systems" among normal, "immunocompetent," healthy
individuals. Notably, the study specifically attributed the potential for
"hemorrhaging disorders" to mycotoxin exposure, an issue the EPA has also
raised.
The EPA maintains a web page titled "Children's Health Initiative: Toxic
Mold." As part of the 'Background' section, the EPA cites an incident
where: "A cluster of cases of acute pulmonary hemorrhage/hemosiderosis was
reported in Cleveland, Ohio, where 27 infants from homes that suffered
flood damage became sick (nine deaths) with the illness starting in
January 1993."
While the case the EPA cites is yet vigorously debated, it is widely known
that attempts to remediate mold problems, without the use of a respirator,
have produced nosebleeds among those so engaged.
Independent findings subsequent to 2004 led some leading researchers to
declare levels of mycotoxins in mold affected structures as "several
hundred" times higher than previously thought. Such a circumstance would
seem to readily lend itself to a better appreciation of mold hazards,
though, surprisingly, the hazards of mold have been discussed for years.
As early as 1999, the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
declared: "Floods Carry a Hazardous Potential For Toxic Mold." And, for
years now, courts throughout the Country have awarded damages to a number
of toxic mold victims.
Given what appear to be such straightforward pronouncements upon toxic
mold's dangers, some may question the basis for debate, whether there is
actually debate, but a debate does exist. Having said this, it is
important to emphasize that many critics of this debate suggest its true
foundations are other than medical or scientific.
In strictly monetary terms, the health, property, and liability costs of
mold are projected as 'extremely substantive,' especially as many
insurance companies no longer cover numerous types of mold-related claims.
As the chairman of the US House of Representatives Judiciary Committee,
Congressman John Conyers (D-Mich), observed regarding toxic mold: "It's
not that no one knows about it, but it seems that a lot of people don't
want to know about it." Recently, and cutting to what many see as the crux
of 'the debate,' came the reply of a European researcher to a query, a
query concerning the health hazards mycotoxins pose for those living or
working in mold affected environments.
"A politically, legally, and economically important question!" was all
that was written, and perhaps all that needs to be.
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