No, there is no way. Even 1 error means the ram is defective or the motherboard has defective Dimm Slots. Run Memtest again, but run it with 1 stick in each slot to determine if you have bad ram or bad slots. If you get errors, you can stop the test and move the same stick to the next slot. Keep track of which stick and which slot. For example, if one stick passes an slot 1, 2 and 4, but fails in slot 3, you probably have a bad Dimm Slot. A bad stick of ram should fail in every slot. A good stick of ram should pass in every slot. If you have no bad slots, RMA the ram. Corsair has an excellent reputation and you should have no problem with the RMA. But, if you have 1 bad stick and 1 good stick, RMA both sticks and get an 8 GB kit. Kits are tested to run well together, individual sticks are not. What you want is a kit of ram. If you have a bad Dimm slot. RMA the Motherboard. Personally, if it were me, and I had a bad Dimm slot, I would RMA the board and the ram so that you should be able to be assured you will not have this problem again. The odds are that you have 1 bad stick and 1 good stick of ram. But you can have a bad Dimm slot too. That is why the extra testing is necessary. I had a board with a bad Dimm slot once. Until you get your ram straightened out and running right, you will continue to have problems.
The downside of this is you will not have a computer while waiting for the RMA to return. If it is just the ram, I'm pretty sure Corsair will do an advanced RMA where they will send you the ram before you return the bad ram. With an advanced RMA, they will take a credit card number and send the new ram out to you sand give you usually 30 days to return the bad ram. The credit card is to protect them. If they get the bad ram within the allotted time, your credit card will not be charged. If they do not receive the ram within that time they will charge the card for the price of the ram. I have done several RMA's that way and never had an issue with anyone.