We just started including this in attics with probable or confirmed raccoon activity. It is borrowed from someplace most of us know... "Raccoon roundworm encephalitis is a very serious (and potentially fatal) disease that requires a long recovery period. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, infected raccoons commonly shed millions of roundworm eggs each day in their feces. These eggs can survive for years under adverse conditions. You can become infected by breathing dust in enclosed spaces in which raccoons have been living, such as attics. In parts of the U.S., such as the West Coast, Midwest and Northeast, local infection rates among raccoons run as high as 80%. In 2003, only 25 cases were reported, but this disease is difficult to diagnose. Of those 25 infected people, five of them died." You may not be able to tell if raccoons have lived in the attic you?re inspecting. If you see raccoon scat on the roof or in the attic, mention it in your inspection report.