Executive summary (what 10 years of evidence consistently shows)

1) Damp and mouldy housing is a causal driver of respiratory disease

  • Strong, repeated associations with asthma incidence, asthma exacerbations, wheeze, chronic cough, and poorer lung function, especially in children.

  • Effects persist across countries, climates, and housing systems.

  • Evidence is strongest for asthma and allergic respiratory disease, but extends to bronchitis, infections, and symptom burden in people with existing lung disease.

2) Health effects are dose-related, not binary

  • Risk increases with extent, persistence, and visibility of dampness/mould (patch size, odour, condensation, repeated water damage).

  • No safe threshold has been identified → “any dampness matters.”

3) Mental health impacts are now well-established

  • Damp and mould exposure is associated with depression, anxiety, stress, sleep disturbance, and reduced wellbeing.

  • Pathways are both biological (inflammation, immune activation) and psychosocial (lack of control, stigma, housing insecurity).

4) Children are disproportionately affected

  • Strong paediatric evidence links damp homes to asthma development, poorer asthma control, and higher healthcare use.

  • Early-life exposure appears particularly important.

5) Damp housing is a marker of structural inequality

  • Concentrated in low-income, overcrowded, poorly maintained, or privately rented housing.

  • Acts as a health inequality amplifier, not just an environmental exposure.

6) Remediation works—but prevention works better

  • Interventions that fix the building (leaks, insulation, ventilation) improve symptoms.

  • Education alone is insufficient if the housing defect remains.


Thematic synthesis of the literature

1. Respiratory health (strongest evidence base)

Consistent findings across reviews (2016–2025):

  • Dampness and mould exposure increases:

    • Asthma onset in children

    • Asthma severity and exacerbations

    • Wheeze, cough, breathlessness

  • Associations hold even after adjusting for smoking, socioeconomic status, and outdoor pollution.

Key insight

Damp housing is not merely an “asthma trigger” — it is a risk factor for developing disease, especially in childhood.


2. Childhood lung health (very strong, clinically relevant)

  • Paediatric reviews emphasise that clinicians routinely see children whose symptoms are driven or sustained by housing conditions.

  • Poor housing undermines:

    • Controller medication effectiveness

    • Self-management plans

    • Long-term lung development

Clinical implication

Asking about housing conditions should be as routine as asking about pets or smoking in paediatric respiratory clinics.


3. Mental health and wellbeing (rapidly strengthening evidence)

Recent state-of-the-science reviews conclude:

  • Damp and mould exposure is associated with:

    • Depression

    • Anxiety

    • Psychological distress

  • Effects persist even when respiratory disease is accounted for.

Mechanisms proposed

  • Chronic inflammation and immune signalling

  • Sleep disruption

  • Loss of control and “housing stress”

  • Fear for children’s health

Important shift

Damp housing is no longer viewed as purely a respiratory issue—it is a whole-person health exposure.


4. Measurement and exposure assessment (important but imperfect)

What works reasonably well

  • Visual inspection and standard dampness indices

  • Structured questionnaires (especially for asthma cohorts)

  • ERMI (Environmental Relative Moldiness Index) as a research tool

What does NOT yet exist

  • A clinically agreed safe exposure threshold

  • A single test that rules exposure in or out

Consensus

Absence of a perfect test does not mean absence of harm.


5. Built environment, ventilation, and remediation

Clinical trials and housing intervention studies show:

  • Improved ventilation and moisture control:

    • Reduces indoor humidity

    • Improves reported physical and mental health

  • Poorly executed energy efficiency measures can worsen damp if ventilation is not addressed.

Critical point

“Warmth without ventilation” is a known failure mode.


6. Housing as a social determinant of health

Major public health frameworks now explicitly define healthy housing as:

  • Warm

  • Dry

  • Well-ventilated

  • Free from mould and toxins

  • Secure and accessible

Shift in framing

Damp housing is not an individual lifestyle issue—it is a system-level health determinant.


What the evidence does not support (important for countering misinformation)

  • No convincing evidence that:

    • “Detox” supplements treat mould exposure

    • Binding agents reverse health effects

    • Genetic susceptibility alone explains illness without exposure

  • Evidence strongly favours environmental remediation, not biomedical “workarounds”.


Implications for practice, policy, and patient support

For clinicians

  • Ask about damp and mould explicitly.

  • Document housing conditions when symptoms are unexplained or refractory.

  • Support patients with letters or reports—this is evidence-based advocacy, not speculation.

For public health & housing services

  • Damp housing remediation is preventive medicine.

  • Children’s respiratory health and mental health outcomes justify investment.

For patients

  • Symptoms are not imagined.

  • The problem is the building, not personal failure.

  • Improvement often requires structural change, not just treatment escalation.


Bottom line (10-year consensus)

Damp and mouldy housing causes avoidable disease, worsens inequality, and undermines medical care.
Fixing homes is one of the most effective—and underused—public health interventions available.


References

  1. Bentley R, Mason K, Jacobs D, Blakely T, Howden-Chapman P, Li A, Adamkiewicz G, Reeves A.
    Housing as a social determinant of health: a contemporary framework. Lancet Public Health. 2025;10(10):e855–e864. doi:10.1016/S2468-2667(25)00142-2. PMID: 40953578.

  2. Moorcroft C, Whitehouse A, Grigg J.
    Damp and mouldy home: impact on lung health in childhood. Archives of Disease in Childhood. 2025;110(6):419–421. doi:10.1136/archdischild-2023-326035. PMID: 39814530.

  3. Gatto MR, Mansour A, Li A, Bentley R.
    A state-of-the-science review of the effect of damp- and mold-affected housing on mental health. Environmental Health Perspectives. 2024;132(8):086001. doi:10.1289/EHP14341. PMID: 39162373.

  4. Patti MA, Henderson NB, Phipatanakul W, Jackson-Browne M.
    Recommendations for clinicians to combat environmental disparities in pediatric asthma. Chest. 2024;166(6):1309–1318. doi:10.1016/j.chest.2024.07.143. PMID: 39059578.

  5. Punyadasa D, Adderley NJ, Rudge G, Nagakumar P, Haroon S.
    Self-reported questionnaires to assess indoor home environmental exposures in asthma patients: a scoping review. BMC Public Health. 2024;24:2915. doi:10.1186/s12889-024-20418-8. PMID: 39434085.

  6. Kozajda A, Miśkiewicz E.
    Exposure to bioaerosol in the residential environment. Medycyna Pracy. 2024;75(6):545–560. doi:10.13075/mp.5893.01508. PMID: 39688367.

  7. Vesper SJ.
    The development and application of the Environmental Relative Moldiness Index (ERMI). Critical Reviews in Microbiology. 2025;51(2):285–295. doi:10.1080/1040841X.2024.2344112. PMID: 38651788.

  8. Nabaweesi R, Hanna M, Muthuka JK, Samuels AD, Brown V, Schwartz D, Ekadi G.
    The built environment as a social determinant of health. Primary Care. 2023;50(4):591–599. doi:10.1016/j.pop.2023.04.012. PMID: 37866833.

  9. Grant TL, Wood RA.
    The influence of urban exposures and residence on childhood asthma. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology. 2022;33(5):e13784. doi:10.1111/pai.13784. PMID: 35616896.

  10. Coulburn L, Miller W.
    Prevalence, risk factors and impacts related to mould-affected housing: an Australian integrative review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022;19(3):1854. doi:10.3390/ijerph19031854. PMID: 35162876.

  11. Wimalasena NN, Chang-Richards A, Wang KI, Dirks KN.
    Housing risk factors associated with respiratory disease: a systematic review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021;18(6):2815. doi:10.3390/ijerph18062815. PMID: 33802036.

  12. Ali SH, Foster T, Hall NL.
    The relationship between infectious diseases and housing maintenance in Indigenous Australian households. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018;15(12):2827. doi:10.3390/ijerph15122827. PMID: 30545014.

  13. Wolkoff P.
    Indoor air humidity, air quality, and health – an overview. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health. 2018;221(3):376–390. doi:10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.01.015. PMID: 29398406.

  14. Mendell MJ, Kumagai K.
    Observation-based metrics for residential dampness and mold with dose–response relationships to health: a review. Indoor Air. 2017;27(3):506–517. doi:10.1111/ina.12342. PMID: 27663473.

  15. Francisco PW, Jacobs DE, Targos L, Dixon SL, Breysse J, Rose W, Cali S.
    Ventilation, indoor air quality, and health in homes undergoing weatherization: a randomized trial. Indoor Air. 2017;27(2):463–477. doi:10.1111/ina.12325. PMID: 27490066.

  16. Barnes CS, Horner WE, Kennedy K, Grimes C, Miller JD.
    Home assessment and remediation. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice. 2016;4(3):423–431.e15. doi:10.1016/j.jaip.2016.01.006. PMID: 27157934.

  17. Chew GL, Horner WE, Kennedy K, Grimes C, Barnes CS, Phipatanakul W, Larenas-Linnemann D, Miller JD.
    Procedures to assist health care providers to determine when home assessments for potential mold exposure are warranted. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice. 2016;4(3):417–422.e2. doi:10.1016/j.jaip.2016.01.013. PMID: 27021632.

  18. Vesper S, Wymer L.
    The relationship between Environmental Relative Moldiness Index values and asthma. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health. 2016;219(3):233–238. doi:10.1016/j.ijheh.2016.01.006. PMID: 26861576.

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