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Air
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - It’s ironic that some products designed to make our homes cleaner and healthier may contribute to asthma.
- When you consider the number of hours spent indoors, it only makes sense to build a healthy house, or convert your existing home into a healthy rather than an unhealthy one.
- Simran Sethi, green pioneer, media personality and Oprah.com columnist presented a free one-hour webinar, "Ten Steps to a Healthier Home" for The Healthy House Institute (HHI) on September 30th, 2010 at 10am CDT. The archived event is also free to access.
- Newer, more benign materials are now available.
- We get a lot of questions about what we call “simplistic solutions to complex situations.” For example, most people want an easy way to solve the problem of poor indoor air quality. Well, we’d like that too and, in some cases, there are relatively simple solutions. But in many cases, the solution isn’t easy.
- Anything airborne that is now living, was once living, or was produced by something alive, and has the capacity to create negative health effects, is considered to be a biological contaminant.
- Jeff May’s Healthy Home Tips book can help you make sure your home is clean and healthy.
- Reading Living Downstream can be an insightful book into discovering how the environment can impact your long-term health and of your loved ones.
- The simple, yet informative guide to discovering the common health dangers in your home and what to do about them.
- The varied effects may be due to one general cause - the effect of exposure to low levels of chemicals in the home, at the workplace, and in food.
- Limiting the use of bleach by using alternative green products.
- The National Air Duct Cleaners Association (NADCA) is urging professionals and consumers to avoid using chemicals for cleaning and maintaining air duct systems.
- Preventing home health hazards by avoiding imported building materials.
- There is a growing body of evidence that poor indoor air quality and other indoor pollutants are negatively affecting us all. Yet it is still difficult to define precisely what makes some materials unhealthy.
- Since our home is a source of many potential allergens, the answer to this question is important.
- More and more people are irritated by or sensitive to fragrances. Will fragrances one day be banned in public spaces?
- That is the debate HHI has been having with a few industry leaders from the home ventilation sector.
- Design details for a more energy-efficient bathroom.
- Some ERVs can recover formaldehyde in the same way that they recover water.
- Low-level carbon-monoxide poisoning seems to be a very common cause of flu-like symptoms.
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