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Air
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - National Center for Healthy Housing releases information from asthma study.
- How to reduce your exposure to this common chemical.
- Formaldehyde is an important industrial chemical used to make other chemicals, building materials, and household products. Here's how to limit your exposure.
- Rather than leaving ventilation to chance, these systems exchange stale air for fresh air in your home, while helping to maintain indoor climate control.
- Location, preventive measures and proper working conditions are essential for a safe and healthy home workshop.
- Web site allows consumers to calculate how their personal energy use contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution.
- Yes and no.
- Many persons find that, for them, the easiest and most efficient home vacuums are central vacuum systems.
- Dry-cleaning chemicals are often intolerable to chemically sensitive people and to some allergic and asthmatic people.
- With energy prices skyrocketing and the temperature continuing to spike, most homeowners dread receiving their energy bill in the height of summer. But what most homeowners don’t realize is that they could own a high performance home that requires much less energy.
- A comprehensive overview of the issues.
- A comprehensive how-to guide.
- While these coatings allow considerable ease in cleaning and reduce the need for oil in cooking, they have potentially serious drawbacks.
- Find out how to tell whether a product or action is "green" or not.
- The chemicals we're exposed to indoors, how they may affect our health, and what the government is - and perhaps isn't - doing about it.
- A national population study reveals the prevalence of multiple chemical sensitivities.
- Going green may be easier than you think.
- Use the principles of separation, elimination, and ventilation to deal with pollutants originating from any source.
- The Healthy House Institute built a model demonstration house designed to optimize occupant health by minimizing indoor air pollution.
- Most people have heard that tight houses cause indoor air pollution. Actually, this represents a simplistic view of the problem. Tight construction is, in reality, part of the solution. This article explains why.
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Information provided by The Healthy House Institute is designed to support,
not to replace the relationship between patient/physician or other qualified
healthcare provider.
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