"Katrina Cough" now effecting those who ONLY just DRIVE THROUGH mold-stricken flood zones

I thought this was of general interest - The flooding caused by these superstorms in the effected areas is now making people sick on a massive scale, even those who only just drive through the massively mold-stricken flooded areas.

(Toxins from mold in in water damaged buildings can kill!)

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-cough4nov04,0,7514027.story?coll=la-home-headli nes

" November 4, 2005     
latimes.com : National News
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THE NATION
"Katrina Cough" Floats Around
# The storm's residual mold and muck may be causing respiratory illnesses in people who have returned home.

By Scott Gold and Ann M. Simmons, Times Staff Writers

NEW ORLEANS -- A large number of people along the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts are developing a condition that some have dubbed "Katrina cough," believed to be linked to mold and dust circulating after Hurricane Katrina.

Health officials say they are trying to determine how widespread the problem is. There are suggestions that it is popping up regularly among people who have returned to storm-ravaged areas, particularly New Orleans.

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Dr. Dennis Casey, one of the few ear, nose and throat doctors seeing patients in New Orleans, called the condition "very prevalent." And Dr. Kevin Jordan, director of medical affairs at Touro Infirmary and Memorial Medical Center in downtown New Orleans, said the hospital had seen at least a 25% increase in complaints regarding sinus headaches, congestion, runny noses and sore throats since Katrina.

In most cases, Casey said, patients appear to be "allergic to the filth they are exposed to." Those allergies make the patients more susceptible to respiratory illness, including bacterial bronchitis and sinusitis.

Among the public, the condition is known alternately as "Katrina cough" and "Katrina's revenge" -- much to the consternation of physicians who feel the monikers paint a needlessly alarming portrait of the environment.

"It started out as a sore throat and scratchy eyes. That turned into a cold, and that turned into a cough again, and that's where it stayed," said Christophe Hinton, 38, who was on the way to a medical clinic Thursday to address an illness that had hung around for weeks, impervious to over-the-counter cold medicine.

Hinton, who lives in the French Quarter, drove a taxi before Katrina but now is working with a chain-saw crew, cutting up toppled trees that need to be hauled away.

"Everybody's got this thing," he said. "Everybody I know." ....

(see the URL for the rest of the article)

For a good reference on health problems caused by mold, see the book "Damp Indoor Spaces and Health" at the URL below:

http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309091934/html/



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this is an interesting development (none / 0)

I've sued landlords (their insurance companies obviously) for tenant exposure to toxic mold and have used "Damp Indoor Spaces and Health" to educate mediators many times.  There has been a concerted effort on the part insurance companies recently to attack the science connecting mold to health problems and deny coverage to landlords sued for this problem.

Having dealt with the science and spoken to many experts in the field, I think the health effects of mold are even more serious than currently believed.

by ksh on Fri Nov 04, 2005 at 06:24:14 PM EST


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