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- HHI Staff and EverydayHealth.com give simple tips to minimizing indoor allergy triggers.
- According to EverydayHealth.com, there is good news and bad news about older homes. There are also simple steps you can take to make a big difference.
- Improving and cleaning your air is an often forgotten task of spring cleaning.
- Is it possible to build without toxins, using breathable walls, and still have an energy-efficient, cost-effective home?
- Smart strategies that will help you get your home clean while keeping things "green."
- It’s ironic that some products designed to make our homes cleaner and healthier may contribute to asthma.
- While they may not have asthma, allergies, or chemical sensitivities, they may have other life-draining health complaints related to unhealthy homes.
- While it is difficult to determine the dollar cost of poor indoor air quality (IAQ), insurance-industry observers agree that the costs may be unrecognized—and ascribed instead to more conventional medical conditions such as respiratory ailments, allergies, and asthma. One report on insurance costs found that “there is strong awareness and growing concern over the ‘silent crisis’ of IAQ and its potential to cause large industry losses.”
- Better than an apple a day, certain foods can prevent childhood illnesses and fight off the effects of toxins.
- Some ERVs can recover formaldehyde in the same way that they recover water.
- Do the new green products on the market always work as well as their traditional counterparts?
- The author shows prefabricated homes can be built with customizable, attractive, and quality green materials in less time than traditional construction, while reducing waste and yielding an energy-efficient, sturdy, and cost-effective home.
- How to clean "greener" to make your home healthier.
- Dust bunnies aren't just unsightly and sometimes allergenic; they contain toxic chemicals.
- Design details for a more energy-efficient bathroom.
- Planning and implementing an energy and space-efficient, eco-friendly bathroom.
- Some plastics contain BPA, which is linked to health issues. Avoid clear, hard plastics marked with a "7" or "PC" and choose baby bottles made from glass. Don't microwave plastic containers. Stay away from toys marked with a "3" or "PVC." Give your baby a frozen washcloth instead of vinyl teethers.
- Limiting the use of bleach by using alternative green products.
- Preventing home health hazards by avoiding imported building materials.
- The primary lesson I have learned in my first two weeks of home ownership is to let go of expectations.
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