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- A University of Melbourne researcher has found that common consumer products, including those marketed as ‘green', 'all-natural', 'non-toxic', and ‘organic’, emit a range of compounds that could harm human health and air quality. But most of these ingredients are not disclosed to the public.
- Air-quality testing can be helpful to understand what is wrong with your air, but since there are hundreds or thousands of possible pollutants, and testing for them all is impossible, a test result may be misleading.
- Newer, more benign materials are now available.
- In June 2013, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services added eight substances to its list of known human carcinogens - one of them is Formaldehyde.
- Following are questions and answers posed to HHI by Content That Works, a group "dedicated to helping local media and businesses thrive by creating high-quality editorial products that attract readers."
- An alternative to higher-priced solid wood furniture, but low-VOC and free of formaldehyde.
- VOC stands for volatile organic compound. There are hundreds of different VOCs and they have two things in common—they contain carbon, and they evaporate quickly.
- More than meets the eye certainly describes this amazing technology - where your ordinary houseplant becomes an efficient VOC remover.
- All-cotton refers to stuffing or fabric consisting of 100%-cotton fibers. However, this term doesn’t always mean such items are "all-natural" or "nontoxic".
- According to the book, The Nature Principle: “The home nature-restoration market is growing. A Canadian company called Nedlaw Living Walls, Inc., produces indoor "living walls" of ficus, hibiscus, orchids and other plants.
- The easiest way to test for formaldehyde is to use a passive monitor.
- Focusing on more than traditional ways to remove VOCs and allergens in the air can lead to better prevention and treatment of allergies and asthma.
- Biomimicry is the “study and imitation of nature’s remarkably efficient designs, bringing together scientists, engineers, architects and innovators who can use those models to create sustainable technologies”.
Recent innovations demonstrate ways that biomimicry is helping to make homes healthier.
- While plywood and other manufactured wood products have long been a source of formaldehyde in our indoor environments, now formaldehyde-free plywood is available.
- We usually put them into six categories.
- Some ERVs can recover formaldehyde in the same way that they recover water.
- How to create a healthy, green environment for your children before and after birth.
- How to clean "greener" to make your home healthier.
- The new generations are more exposed to toxins than ever before.
- Design details for a more energy-efficient bathroom.
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We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
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