Guest guest Posted February 10, 2008 Report Share Posted February 10, 2008 yes yes yes.. of course, AGAIN, they make the mistake of conspicuously ignoring the fact that mold itself will make you sensitized to it. Being that that, * mold creating hypersensitization, and * mold creating immunosuppression are the crucial issues in causation, in lawsuits, in my opinion, the situation begins to look extremely immoral and intentional. This is a big story. I would think media would be all over it, Why won't they connect the dots? On 2/10/08, Carl E. Grimes <grimes@...> wrote: > > Sharon, > > You are exactly right in your comments: > > >...the IOM report. They state that HP occurs in susceptible > > people. But they never define the term susceptible. > > In the December 2006 Indoor Envirnoments Connection article > on Best and Worst for 2006 I presented the argument this way: > > WORST: ...First is the continuing lack of response from > public health on any indoor environmental issues except > those that kill, as if those that sicken aren't of > consequence. One example is the ongoing controversy > about the health effects of mold exposure. Because > public health takes the stand that any mold can be a > problem for any individual who is sensitized to it, don't you > think they should provide guidance or a definition to > identify such an individual? Without that, their statement > is little more than an excuse to continue ignoring those > victims. > > > Carl Grimes > Healthy Habitats LLC > > -- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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