News Release
November 3, 2004
Contact: Kristina Goodnough, 860-679-3700
e-mail: goodnough@nso.uchc.edu
Guidance for Clinicians on the Recognition and Management of Health
Effects Related to Mold Exposure and Moisture Indoors
Published by UConn Health Center
FARMINGTON, CONN. – From sinusitis to asthma and pneumonitis, serious
illness as a result of poor indoor air quality has been well documented
in recent years. Less clearly established are the specific causes of
building related illness and the measures required to prevent or
ameliorate them.
For physicians and other health care providers faced with a rapidly
growing number of patients troubled by indoor contaminants, there is a
new primer to guide them, entitled Guidance for Clinicians on the
Recognition and Management of Health Effects Related to Mold Exposure
and Moisture Indoors, published by the Center for Indoor
Environments and Health at UConn Health Center with a grant from the
Environmental Protection Agency.
“It’s a manual for primary care physicians,” says Eileen Storey, MD,
MPH, chief of the Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
and one of the authors of the book. “We give them an approach to use
with their patients. We help them identify patients and the illnesses or
complaints that may be related to mold or other indoor contaminants. We
give them assessment tools for those patients. We tell them how to
counsel their worried well patients and guide them to resources their
patients can use to reduce moisture and mold in their homes,” says
Storey.
For example, the book contains a questionnaire physicians can use to
evaluate a patient when an environmental problem is suspected. It can be
filled out by a patient in a few minutes and contains questions that
help explore moisture and mold in the patient’s home, school, or work
environment. Any positive response may indicate uncontrolled moisture
with a potential for biological growth and can be used to start a dialog
between patient and health care provider. The book provides a list of
references to specific books or pamphlets that patients can use to
eliminate problem moisture.
“We know that exposure to mold and other contaminants in indoor
environments may adversely affect a person’s health,” says Paula Schenck,
MPH, another author of the book. “We spend nearly 90 percent of our time
indoors. Asthma has increased substantially in recent years, so we
suspect the indoor environment plays a role. But not everyone is
sensitized to indoor contaminants, and different people become
sensitized in different ways.” The book provides approaches to use for
assessing indoor environments and gives physicians strategies to
recognize environmentally related clinical problems, says Schenck.
“Something is going on in our indoor environment that is making us
sick,” says Storey. “We see it in office workers. We see it in school
teachers. Their illnesses range from chronic runny nose to sinusitis or
more serious conditions like asthma and hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
Their symptoms often diminish when they leave the workplace for the
weekend or the summer, but we don’t know what is actually causing their
illness,” says Storey. In recent years, a tremendous amount of attention
has focused on architecture, construction materials, and ventilation
systems trying to figure this out, according to Storey. “We use
wallboard instead of plaster. We don’t build with wood and bricks as
much; instead we use steel and concrete. Modern materials don’t shed
water as well. When water comes into contact with wallboard and
wall-to-wall carpeting, it can create a beautiful environment for
growing mold,” she says.
“The book is designed to provide primary care physicians with the
tools they need to address environmental illnesses, because primary care
physicians are the point of contact. If a patient presents with
persistent respiratory symptoms, physicians should inquire about the
presence of chronic moisture in the home, workplace, or school,” says
Storey. “It’s like tobacco. Thirty years ago, doctors did not think of
tobacco as an issue for them in their practice. Now it’s standard health
care practice for physicians to ask their patients about tobacco use and
provide counseling for it. We hope this book will do the same thing for
indoor air quality. We want them to ask their patients about
environmental issues that might be related to their illnesses and be
able to provide counseling about them.”
Besides Storey and Schenck, authors are Kenneth H. Dangman, MD, PhD,
MPH; Robert L. De Bernardo, MD, MPH; Chin S. Yang, PhD., Anne Bracker,
CIH, MPH, and Michael J. Hodgson, MD, MPH.
The book presents illustrative case reports, briefly discusses fungal
ecology, reviews current literature on health effects from mold and
moisture and outlines principles that underlie a professional
environmental assessment. It is available at the UConn Health Center
Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine’s Center for Indoor
Environments and Health website,
www.oehc.uchc.edu/clinser/indoor.htm.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of medicine and dental medicine, John Dempsey Hospital, the UConn Medical Group and University Dentists. Founded in 1961, the Health Center pursues a mission of providing outstanding health care education in an environment of exemplary patient care, research and public service. To learn more about the UConn Health Center, visit
our website at www.uchc.edu.
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