Can mold
grow in mattresses? If so, how can I get rid of the mold?
- Anon.
Indeed mold can grow in mattresses
and box springs as well. How do I know? Well, it happened in my own
home, in the bed, bedroom of my oldest daughter. That was about 20
years ago.
It occurred shortly after we moved
into what was then our new house. About the time we noticed our
daughter having respiratory problems at night, we also noticed that
her comforter smelled musty. We responded by washing the comforter
and bedding including the pillow (on which one could see tiny black
mold colonies). The washing took away the mold odor and her symptoms
improved. With time both the mold odor and symptoms returned. We
responded in a similar manner multiple times (this was at a time that
my research on mold in buildings had not yet begun) and each time the
odor and symptoms returned. Finally, I examined the bed and to my
(then) surprise both the mattress and box springs smelled musty. This
was quite surprising since the bed had been purchased but 2 years
before and was not in a particularly moist location.
I was a much younger faculty member
at that time and purchasing a new bed seemed like a costly, drastic
move. As a consequence, I started to look for information on how to
remove mold from beds and box springs. It may not have been an
uncommon problem at one time as the USDA extension service actually
had a pamphlet that advised putting mattresses out in the bright
sunshine. I did that a couple of days and it did in fact work to some
degree, but the mold odor always came back. The ultraviolet light in
sunshine can kill mold, but it could not penetrate through the depth
of the mattress and box springs.
We got rid of the “moldy mattresses
and box springs” replacing them with new ones. Her respiratory
symptoms disappeared over night and did not reoccur until she went on
to college where unfortunately a carpet fragment once stored in an
unheated space re-exposed her to a mold source.
In recollecting events it is likely
that mold made its way into the mattress and box springs was through
her pillow.
At that time she wore her hair long, and I suspect that
on showering and going to bed her hair was not completely dry. A
somewhat wet head, became a somewhat wet pillow, that then began to
grow mold which subsequently infested the mattress and box springs.
If one has a moldy mattress or box
springs, what do you do with it? Get rid of it (put it out as trash)
and replace it with a new one (even if you think you cannot afford
to).
August 27, 2004
Indoor Environmental Quality (2000), Thad Godish Ph.D.,
C.I.H