Fungi and Disease 
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Airborne Fungal Diseases
Fungal Infection
Blastomycosis
Cryptococcus

Candida

Skin Infection with Fungi

Fungal Contamination of Buildings

Allergy to Fungi
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Economics and Politics of Mold

Concern about mold-related illness in homes and offices has increased well beyond the scientific knowledge. Molds are found everywhere. The abundance and variety of molds pose difficulties both for the understanding of mold presence and for the evaluation of the risk of disease. Often mold contamination of buildings leads to expensive attempts to restore buildings, insurance claims and court battles. 

There are unresolved issues. For example:

1. Airborne fungal diseases are difficult to diagnose and it is reasonable to believe that many suffer and even die of fungal allergy and infections without the benefit of proper diagnosis and treatment.

2. Buildings are often poorly ventilated, poorly constructed or infiltrated by water and support mold growth.

3. Ill defined illnesses are often blamed on molds without an understanding of the ubiquity of mold growth. Medical doctors have little or no ability to evaluate indoor mold-related symptoms. Insurance claims and court hearings cannot be resolved with medical evidence and environmental assessments are seldom definitive.

Montanaro reported: The potential human effects of mold exposure have led to a new legal industry with devastating impact on the insurance industry... claims for mold-related problems has tremendous impact on the insurance industry, with more than 1.3 billion dollars spent in 2002 to settle lawsuits and mold-related damages. Unfortunately, the response from the insurance industry has clearly been to settle cases and to attempt to no longer put themselves at risk of covering potential mold-related damages. Recently, the State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company has attempted to eliminate coverage from mold-related damages in 33 states. “

Some molds receive a lot publicity such as Stachybotyrs or “ toxic black mold."  This mold is found everywhere and half of all blood donors have antibodies to it. When air samples are cultured for mold growth, spore densities in home often range from 400 to 1000. On farms, mold spore density can be in the millions per cubic meter of air.  In hospital up to 48 pathogenic  species were identified with an average fungal density of 124 to 485  per cubic meter.

The most common airborne fungi, both indoors and outdoors were Cladosporium, Penicillium, nonsporulating fungi, and Aspergillus. Stachybotrys chartarum was identified in the indoor air in 6% of the buildings studied and in the outdoor air around 1% of the buildings studied.

See  Fungal Contamination of Buildings
 

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