Hurricanes are gone, but mold and asthma remains [SPECIAL]

Published: Dec. 7, 2020, 4:09 a.m.

b'When the floodwaters receded, mold growth follows.\\nResearchers at the University of South Carolina have found that substantial flooding is more than an inconvenience. It is making mold a growing threat along the East Coast and in the Palmetto State. In Eastern North Carolina, more people make trips to hospital emergency departments for asthma treatments than in any other part of the state, say researchers at East Carolina University. The researchers have been focusing on the connection between climate change and asthma, a chronic inflammatory disease, in the eastern counties.\\nNadia Ramlagan, of North Carolina News Service, travels to communities including Nichols and Sellars in South Carolina, and Bayboro and south Lumberton in North Carolina.\\nREAD MORE: Hurricanes Devastate SC Town, Leaving Mold Behind https://shar.es/aopOJL\\nREAD MORE: As Mold Grows in Hurricane Aftermath, More NC Asthma Patients Suffer https://shar.es/aopOlH\\nRELATED CWG Show: Flooding and how to protect your home https://youtu.be/tVV_9ijtjWc\\nSUPPORT US: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup\\n\\n--- \\n\\nSend in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/carolinaweather/message'