Guest guest Posted November 12, 2008 Report Share Posted November 12, 2008 One would think that this alone would lead the scientific community to want to investigate this public health issue with the urgency it deserves. How many people are exposed to mold chronically by poor housing, schools and workplaces? A huge number, and the cost to society of ignoring this problem is orders of magnitude greater than the cost of addressing it would be. The problem is, those responsible are so used to getting a free ride, and they are relatively politically powerful to the sick. When you are sick, you can't afford lawyers, you can't afford long disruptions in your life, (if you still have a job, and miss work you will lose it, so how can you stay at home to ensure that the work done on your apartment doesnt contaminate everything you own?) Spoken to a remediation consultant who was in the business for the money, that might sound " paranoid " , but any person sick with mold illness knows that it literally is a life or death issue for them. There are countless other issues like that. On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 6:59 PM, tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: > November 12, 2008 > > http://www.sinushealthadvisor.com/what-long-term-health-problems-can- > mold-inflict-on-a-person-living-in-a-house-with-a-mold-problem/ > > What long term health problems can mold inflict on a person living > in a house with a mold problem? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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