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- Simple strategies that can help you lower your energy bills.
- With the ill effects of poor indoor air quality often in the news these days, it pays to
design and build a house that’s healthy from the start.
- High-efficiency washing machines could save you $550 in water and energy annually.
- Chiras is an internationally known author, educator, consultant, and founder and director of The Evergreen Institute.
- The longer mold grows, the greater the potential hazard and the harder it is to control.
- The homeowner gains a finished, insulated
basement, a healthy house, and an estimated
energy savings of a whopping 81%.
- Is your family and home prepared for a disaster?
- The answer is “not necessarily,” according to a report released by Environment and Human Health, Inc. (EHHI), titled “LEED Certification: Where Energy Efficiency Collides With Human Health.” EHHI is a non-profit organization composed of doctors, public health professionals and policy experts who specialize in research that examines environmental threats to human health.
- Are you looking for a simple way to lead a healthier life? Skip the fad diets and trendy health fixes and focus on drinking enough water every day.
- In a typical forced-air system with leaky ducts and an inefficient filter, the ducts are usually contaminated with a wide variety of particulates and microorganisms—all directly exposed to the air being breathed by the occupants.
- Controlling dust mites involves thinking about the whole home. Here are tips to avoid being part-smart.
- Frequent consumption of cured meats results in lower lung function test scores and increases the odds of developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
- There are many health factors to consider in usage and installation of electric systems. Here's an overview of them.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 55-63.
- Designing and building an energy-efficient home.
- Three viewpoints of designing a healthy building include: the importance of sustainable development, the role of occupants for ensuring indoor air quality, and ongoing developments related to indoor finishes with low chemical emissions and good fungal resistance.
- Viewing the whole house as an integrated system helps.
- Electronics, especially appliances, are some of the heaviest users of energy, and often consume energy even when they're not in use. Learn which electronics are the biggest offenders.
- Bright ideas for better lighting.
- Today’s growing concerns toward high energy costs, dependence on foreign oil and pollution-generating fuel sources are all driving the construction industry to pursue more energy efficient technologies for the home.
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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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