Photo Courtesy of: Mold Pros
John Bohde never planned a career involving medicine, yet physicians now keep his number on speed dial. As vice president of The Mold Pros, he has grown a Kansas City basement venture into an eight-office firm that more than 150 doctors trust when mycotoxins stall a patient’s recovery. His transition from financial analyst to environmental health ally reflects a quiet but deliberate mission: trace hazards others miss and safeguard residents left vulnerable by conventional mold cleanup.
A Personal Spark and Leadership Philosophy
John Bohde began to see mold not just as a structural issue, but as a hidden health risk. He noticed that even after cleanup jobs were marked complete, families often stayed sick. His Kansas City firm, The Mold Pros, took shape during the foreclosure crisis and gradually evolved into a national operation focused on environmental illness. A turning point came when an infectious-disease specialist called to say that one of Bohde’s projects had finally resolved a patient’s symptoms after two other contractors had failed. That case led to steady physician referrals and a deeper understanding of their role. “We are the doctor’s eyes and ears on the ground,” Bohde said. “With an environmental illness, if you do not address the environment, the patient never gets better.”
That mindset shows in how he leads. Bohde still joins site visits and reviews lab results with clients, aiming to bring clarity to what can feel like overwhelming data. Colleagues describe him as meticulous and empathetic. “If someone is sick and scared, numbers on a page do not help unless you explain what they mean,” he said. That belief shapes how The Mold Pros works with families and physicians, earning trust in homes where health is on the line.
Building Cleanup with Clinical Precision
The Mold Pros inspect structures for mycotoxins, volatile organic compounds and endotoxins, and use polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing to analyze mold DNA. Samples go to third-party accredited labs, supporting transparent and traceable reporting for both clients and referring physicians.
John Bohde and his team hold U.S. Patent 12,097,458 B2 for a botanical enzyme cleaning formula. The formula targets mold toxins at the protein level and does not rely on harsh chemicals. It is marketed as non-toxic to people, pets and plants, and the light citrus fragrance it leaves behind is intended to signal a fresh result.
Strong referral relationships—with over 150 physicians and approximately 70 percent of new business coming from medical sources—suggest growing trust among healthcare professionals. Doctors frequently cite the company’s detailed testing results and documentation when evaluating environmental factors affecting patient health.
Deliberate Growth, Quiet Influence
The Mold Pros expanded with care rather than aggressive franchising, focusing on consistent protocols across all locations. As covered in a case study with Encircle, every office—including branches in Indiana, Florida, and Colorado—uses the same custom forms and documentation workflows to maintain uniform quality
Better Business Bureau reports confirm a strong reputation. The Indianapolis and Overland Park offices hold full accreditation with A+ ratings; another branch such as Denver maintains an A+ rating, though without accreditation. These results suggest consistent customer satisfaction tied to technical capability and transparent practices.
Recognition followed: The Mold Pros earned a designation as Top Environmental Testing Services Provider in 2023 by Environmental Business Review, reflecting the company’s position within the sector, though the official citation does not explicitly tie the accolade to leadership style.
Changing Perceptions, Protecting Health
Doctors increasingly refer patients to Bohde’s firm when environmental triggers are suspected. The company combines third‑party–verified testing, botanical enzyme treatments, and physician collaboration—without making overt medical claims.
“With an environmental illness, if you do not address the environment, the patient never gets better,” Bohde said. That emphasis on identifying hidden mold toxins, VOCs and chemicals underpins growing trust and the more than 150 doctors who routinely refer cases.
John Bohde’s work goes beyond removing visible mold. It tackles the unseen toxins and environmental hazards that quietly undermine health. His mission to reveal these hidden threats reflects a profound shift, one that demands attention to what lies beneath the surface, bridging remediation with real healing.