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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

As a mold consultant, you're going to visit two homes in the Dudney neighborhood.

In the first home, the inhabitants complain of health problems. After talking to them, you suspect mold problems and enter their home to investigate. Looking in obvious places such as on windowsills and in the bathroom, you find plenty of evidence of mold.

You also find mold growing in the ducts and in the drywall of their home. After testing the air quality, you find that the home has a spore count of 20,000 per cubic meter. With this excessive reading, you find it easy to tell the family to vacate the home until the problem is remedied.

The second home you visit isn't so simple. These people have merely found a bit of mold in their home and are wondering if it could affect their health. You look at the mold samples and test the air quality, finding a count of 200 spores per cubic meter. This reading is considerably less, and is just below the safe exposure levels.

What do you do?